Insufficient in a sentence as an adjective

They don't have any understanding of the fact that skill is often necessary, but always insufficient. They believe their hype.

But in the end, that's just an ad hominem and is insufficient for dismissing his point, which I believe is a legitimate one.

And while it sounds unlike Google to have left room to do significantly better, the way they treat the innocent implies their technology may be insufficient.

Extreme efforts such as these may still be insufficient to prevent New York from being destroyed by terrorists. In that case, the acts of a few crazy people still overcame a monumental effort by the entire intelligence apparatus.

Numerous economists have made the point that a large trade surplus can be a sign of economic weakness: perpetual insufficient demand at home in the domestic market. Fingleton has rarely taken this view into account.

Editing source code alone now seemed an insufficient usage of Vim. You installed it on all of your machines at home and used it to write everything from emails to English papers. You installed a portable version along with a fine-tuned personalized .

We can figure it out part by tiny part, but that's insufficient for thought or practice on any significant scale. He's a critic of our reliance on physics and constructing physical scientific models, not because they aren't the most cutting-edge way we know to study the universe they are!

So just reading your lease is insufficient to determine whether or not one could rent a room. Further, from the article: "San Francisco bans all residential rentals of less than 30 days unless the hosts have a conditional use permit - an expensive and cumbersome process that virtually everyone ignores.

Right now there are insufficient safeguards against police misconduct, and ubiquitious cameras would be a good step toward making those safeguards sufficient.

It's entirely possible that the journalist in question is innocent of deception and only guilty of poor journalism and/or poor trip planning and/or insufficient UI design. However, the issue with the review and that of the social contract are entirely related.

A general reply to everyone saying this was unacceptable or that insufficient precautions were taken: This experiment was performed at a facility designed for such experiments under the supervision of people who are trained to handle such experiments. The result, while upsetting, was a freak accident.

The documentary goes into more depth as to why it is possible to see subtle variations in lighting using the device, and why a simple camera obscura is insufficient. Similarly, the documentary also notes that the scrollwork on the harpsichord in The Music Lesson exhibits lens distortion consistent with an optical system.

It is stating - categorically - that the commonly accepted narrative is based on an insufficient accounting of the facts, and that this narrative is unsustainable in the face of a more complete record of what actually happened. Here's the key passage: "It didn't take a military genius to see that, while it might be possible to fight a decisive battle against one great power invading from one direction, it would not be possible to fight off two great powers attacking from two different directions.

Technically, even three months should suffice, but it is insufficient for the edge case when these three things hold true simultaneously: * You've to walk away from a customer in the middle of a project, and * Dry sales pipeline, and * Unexpected crisis at the personal front: very close friend in need of money for surgery etc. God be with you.

The papers conclusion includes: Finally, returning to the questions posed at the start, we conclude that although there is a large and growing body of evidence linking exposure to wood/biomass smoke itself with both acute and chronic illness, there is insufficient evidence at present to support regulating it separately from its individual components, especially fine particulate matter. In addition, there is insufficient evidence at present to conclude that woodsmoke particles are significantly less or more damaging to health than general ambient fine particles.

Insufficient definitions

adjective

of a quantity not able to fulfill a need or requirement; "insufficient funds"

See also: deficient