inchoate - use in sentences

Modifies a noun

  • offense: Territorial scope of inchoate offenses related to offenses under this Act.
  • mass: Clayman's palms are pressed against Himiko's body as tho she was trying to pull shape out of inchoate mass.
  • form: The question of the audience and the society for poems was there in a very inchoate form.
  • stage: For him, there were no unmerited media appearances and references for work or an oeuvre still evidently at an inchoate stage of development.
  • state: These features of diversity and informality suggest that discourse in this particular area of Development Studies is at a relatively early and inchoate state.

Modifying Another Word

  • often: Turner's vision remains as vital today, expressing as it does the often inchoate and funereal qualities of the Venetian experience.
  • rather: The " Reception " seemed to me rather inchoate not to say disorderly.
  • somewhat: The Roman Empire is the classical illustration of this policy, tho in a somewhat inchoate form, in the ancient world.
  • very: The question of the audience and the society for poems was there in a very inchoate form.

Used with adjective complement

  • remain: The lien remains inchoate until a breach of the charter occurs, when the lien becomes perfected.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.