Inconceivable in a sentence as an adjective

That is such an inconceivable amount of storage, etc. It really is, still.

It would have been inconceivable for me six months ago. I use the following: 1.

It's inconceivable that he will end up regretting any of this. It shows him at his most vulnerable and most powerful at the same time.

It is inconceivable, and for good reason. MS cannot make decisions.

It's inconceivable that any of them would do anything like you propose, because that goes against how they got where they are in the first place.

It should be inconceivable, at a technical company, to hand over that much hiring power to a non-technical person." And yet they often do.

Both phones are based on technology nearly inconceivable just a few decades ago, when Chimel and Robinson were decided. Slip.

It should be inconceivable, at a technical company, to hand over that much hiring power to a non-technical person. HR people are valuable in a company.

It was inconceivable for students not to love the guy—he was also one of the nicest people in the world and never had to scold anyone—ever. Because as hard as the course material could be, it was impossible to hate him—and chemistry.

Com The opening line of the article's totally wrong in saying this "would be inconceivable if it was any other company than Comcast".

The notion of going to college was virtually inconceivable to me and I was pretty sure I'd end up out in a field or a factory someplace. For a while I did odd manual labor jobs, sanding decks, cleaning gutters, digging drainage trenches, that sort of thing.

> Because the project was always two months from launch it was inconceivable that there was enough time to re-engineer the terrain engine to make path-finding easier, so the path-finding code just had to be made to work. Really enjoyed this part of the article.

Having worked for several big banks it is simply inconceivable that no one knew what this guy was doing. Which is probably why his immediate boss resigned immediately after the police took him away.

Had Hitler won, it is not inconceivable that the Godwin's law would have been quite different, it might as well have picked some US slave runner founder. Finally, had Stalin been not named Stalin how else would one have StalinGrad, a derived tool for gradient based optimization.

A 4-5% failure rate, at the point of installation, would have been absolutely inconceivable in that job. Sure, there were lots of failures, most caused by assembly errors, some caused by damage during assembly, some due to component failures, but the vast majority were caught before the trucks were loaded.

It's almost inconceivable that one could translate a concatenative program back into Algol-esque syntax [2]. But Erlang really doesn't do anything that couldn't be in Algol-esque syntax.

Edit: It's probably also worth pointing out that, someday in the future, it's not inconceivable that we may eventually place the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Paradox in the same league as Relativity. That paper was published in 1935, when Einstein was already 56 years old.

Fridges of 1958 had locking latches that opened only from the outside, it's not inconceivable that moving to a magnetically sealed door like modern fridges was not seen as a trivial, or the most obvious, change at the time.

In 1950, it would have been pretty inconceivable that a woman from Iran would have had the access and opportunities to contribute to mathematics in a way that would have earned a Fields medal; in 2014, it's a first-time feat; hopefully, in the future, it quickly becomes mundane.

Inconceivable definitions

adjective

totally unlikely

See also: impossible unimaginable