Immeasurably in a sentence as an adverb

It wants to be expensive because it can be immeasurably valuable to the recipient. That tension will not go away.

A couple of hours of sunlight after I finish working would improve my experience of winter immeasurably.

Later philosophers pointed out, of course, that it was also possible that the speed of light was finite but very fast, and the eclipse lag time was immeasurably small. Then Roemer settled things once and for all.

Doing these things will help you immeasurably. Pulling credit is as much about identity verification as it is credit risk.

The quality of experience you would get from a tightly optimised and simplified Firefox OS would be immeasurably better. Again.

My team has switched to mumble for meetings and stuff and we find it immeasurably better. Plus, channels are a much better method for general collaboration than the outdated concept of conference calls.

Yes, his stepping forward diluted the dialogue a bit -- but it also increased the exposure of the dialogue immeasurably.

Clever goes totally unnoticed most of the time, but its impact immeasurably outweighs compassion. How many humanitarians do you need to feed as many mouths as Norman Borlaug did?

Can't say everything worked perfectly, but there was so much scaffolding already in place with pkgsrc that it simplified my process immeasurably.

It may not make one wealthy, but it will likely go a long way toward making one happy, and it can improve society immeasurably. The social implications of college seem to get lost in the debate on HN, and really everywhere to some extent.

The oddest I've seen is the US/Canada air border also improved immeasurably when they laid off loads of Canadian border staff, forcing them to come up with more efficient systems for handling the same number of people with a smaller staff. It's not what you'd call good now, but it's way better.

I am now nearly 40 and my life situation has improved immeasurably. I am married to a wonderful lady, I own a house, I have a couple of reasonably successful projects-***-start-ups that pay the bills and free me - hopefully forever - from having to work for someone else.

Additionally, reading and writing on places like HN has contributed immeasurably to my skills as a programmer over the years. Not so much by teaching me specific things but by keeping me in touch with the community and aware of things I wouldn't otherwise be aware of.

Doctors lose nothing, but, step-by-step, the general population gains immeasurably.

Drunk-driving alone costs our country immeasurably in terms of human and economic cost. Eliminating the vast majority of infractions would be a real contribution to humanity.

While learning English will help immeasurably when you're learning to program, the languages themselves are often highly English-baed, trying to tackle programming and English at the same time makes for quite a barrier. Since being able to ask difficult, technical questions in your native language would make it easier to learn, I don't see what's so bad about that.

As a former hosting employee it is immeasurably frustrating that everybody mentally defaults to AWS these days without even a second thought. All of Silicon Valley is basically wired to funnel venture capital directly to Amazon.

I'm not sure how exactly the lessons from not-for-profit, tightly regulated workplaces like schools can be applied more broadly to the rest of the economy, but what I do know is that my standard of living, autonomy and ability to actually stop and smell the roses has increased immeasurably since I became a teacher. I think the labour movement that you're calling for needs to be broad based.

Maintainability is immeasurably boosted by referential transparency; most of the time you can look at a single function in isolation and understand everything that's going on rather than having it be affected by other pieces of the codebase. I find it's much easier to work on a large codebase in Clojure vs Ruby just because it encourages a clean separation of concerns.

The system of ranking people by points, insisting that every single post be some giant revelation of wisdom that advances the fortunes of the tech industry and mankind immeasurably, etc. has only exacerbated people's tendency to self-aggrandize, kiss ***, over-analyze minutiae, and constantly try to one-up each other...

> Third, the inflated penalty also changes the perception of the judge and the jury Yeah, if the real "deserved penalty" is 6 months probation, starting at 13 years anchors that number in people's heads, and the sympathetic jury will feel great for only giving him 1 year in prison, when that is a sentence double in length and immeasurably worse in magnitude compared to the deserved penalty.

Immeasurably definitions

adverb

to an immeasurable degree; beyond measurement; "the war left him immeasurably fearful of what man can do to man"

adverb

without bounds; "he is infinitely wealthy"

See also: boundlessly infinitely