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inapprehensive
[ in-ap-ri-hen-siv ]
inapprehensive
/ ˌɪæɪˈɛԲɪ /
adjective
- not perceiving or feeling fear or anxiety; untroubled
- rare.unable to understand; imperceptive
Derived Forms
- ˌԲˈԲ, adverb
- ˌԲˈԲԱ, noun
Other Word Forms
- a··s· adverb
- a··s·Ա noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of inapprehensive1
Example Sentences
She realized the pitfalls that lie in wait for persons as simple and as inapprehensive as Annette, especially when they are beautiful as well, and she sighed.
So it happens that when those who use the word 'realist' use it with no unanimity of intent and with a loose, inapprehensive application, it is not easy for me, who repudiate it altogether, to make a guess at its meaning.
For years, it seems, he has been writing poetry, but it is only recently that an inapprehensive country has awakened to the fact.
She is inapprehensive that by her side stands an incarnation of dormant passion, needing nothing but a look from her to burst into immense life.
All the birds of this class are strangely inapprehensive of danger when moulting or hatching.
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