Insoluble in a sentence as an adjective

There are two types of fiber, soluble and insoluble.

There is the question of energy and reaction mass, real problems and as yet unsolved, but not insoluble.

Still meaningless, because of the insoluble problem of access.

The three-body problem is known to be insoluble in closed form, but anyone cam model it numerically.

So even Pu is not always very bad, since PuO is almost insoluble in water, which can be used for nice party tricks [1]: [...] to eat as much plutonium as any prominent nuclear critic will eat or drink caffeine.

If space is thought of\n as an empirical entity, the insoluble problem arises\n whether it is finite or infinite.

These are not insoluble problems, they just aren't priorities for the richest nations because they're happening elsewhere.

As well as a food additive, in beauty product applications, and as part of many pharmaceuticals for ***** which are insoluble in water.

If the no-drama principle is correct, then there is a fundamental and insoluble contradiction in our understanding of physics.

They were part of how I thought even when I wasn't depressed, and I wasted a lot of energy debating them with myself and fretting about problems that were insoluble but weren't really problems.

That converts a trivially solved technical problem into an insoluble political problem.

Seawater contains little thorium, because thorium oxide is insoluble.

This conclusion has never been refuted, many, however, have refused to draw it for the unattractiveness of its implications, such as1. good programming is probably beyond the intellectual abilities of today's "average programmer"2. to do, hic et nunc, the job well with today's army of practitioners, many of whom have been lured into a profession beyond their intellectual abilities, is an insoluble problem3.

It can be kept in some of the ordinary structural metals steel, copper, aluminum, etc. because of the formation of a thin film of insoluble metal fluoride which protects the bulk of the metal, just as the invisible coat of oxide on aluminum keeps it from burning up in the atmosphere.

> To prepare carmine, the powdered scale insect bodies are boiled in ammonia or a sodium carbonate solution, the insoluble matter is removed by filtering, and alum is added to the clear salt solution of carminic acid to precipitate the red aluminium salt, called "carmine lake" or "crimson lake.

Insoluble definitions

adjective

(of a substance) incapable of being dissolved

See also: indissoluble

adjective

admitting of no solution or explanation; "an insoluble doubt"

adjective

without hope of solution; "an insoluble problem"