Inchoate in a sentence as an adjective

I wonder if "X-eer" is an inchoate language trend?

Indeed, these days, your bank account is an inchoate property right.

Many devs have an inchoate fear that this is somehow illegal.

I think that the concern crypto engineers have with garbage collected runtimes is held in tension by the equal and opposite force of their concern about memory corruption bugs in C. It's a concern, but an inchoate concern.

It's worth noting that Silicon Valley's lobbying organization is inchoate and ineffective compared to more established causes.

Advertising is partly to blame, but most of the responsibility rests with them not to buy ludicrous products in the hope of some inchoate recognition from others.

I totally agree and in fact I would go further to say that the notion of 'genius' is nothing more than an inchoate, rudimentary classification system used to group together successes or extremes in the realm of mental pursuits.

Naturally, there's a problem when the interests of individual bureaucrats or bureaux come into conflict with those of the organization as a whole, but that's often the result of an incomplete or inchoate conflict resolution process.

I will say though that given the continuing productivity of language, the fact that those earlier examples exist doesn't necessarily preclude my supposition that "X-eer" could see an uptick in neologistic usage - although again you're quite right that it wouldn't be "inchoate" in the sense of not being extant.

My inchoate thoughts:When you study, say, biology, you'll probably learn about all the wrong turns that very smart people made along the road to where we currently stand: self-moving principles in Aristotle; vitalism; spontaneous generation; enzymes as living organism; and many many more.

Wikipedia:> Reasonable suspicion is a legal standard of proof in United States law that is less than probable cause, the legal standard for arrests and warrants, but more than an "inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or 'hunch'"; it must be based on "specific and articulable facts", "taken together with rational inferences from those facts".I don't see how software changes this.

Inchoate definitions

adjective

only partly in existence; imperfectly formed; "incipient civil disorder"; "an incipient tumor"; "a vague inchoate idea"

See also: incipient