释义 |
Definition of infeasible in English: infeasibleadjective ɪnˈfiːzɪb(ə)lɪnˈfizəbəl Not possible to do easily or conveniently; impracticable. proof that a program works is infeasible unless it is very short Example sentencesExamples - To exhaustively search all possible networks is infeasible, in practice, even with high-performance computers.
- This cooperation has to go beyond the symptomatic such as use of protective devices on commercial planes, which may be too expensive, or securing airport perimeters, which may be infeasible.
- Will even the basic act of indexing the Web soon become infeasible?
- This may be almost as infeasible as asking everybody to work Easter Monday, and I am sure there would be practical difficulties involved, especially with on-call rotas and part time workers.
- Inadequate child care means that many recipients must forgo job opportunities or find it infeasible to keep a job for very long.
- If they do, most of them fail after the first phase when initial research shows the technology to be infeasible at this time, or not worth the expenditures in the long run.
- At this point, we have not seen anything to make us believe that a five-year $10 billion fabricator project, starting today, would be infeasible…
- As I'm fond of pointing out, it's not that going back to the moon is infeasible; it's that the knowledge to do so isn't living knowledge - it's all in books and not in active, working minds.
- A space elevator still seems infeasible and I think a large scale space station that could operate as a docking port and even an assembly facility is probably too much of an initial expenditure.
- As long as this rule is ingrained in our culture, effective solutions to our worst problems will be politically infeasible, and politically feasible solutions will be ineffective or destructive.
- China won't be responsible for all this economic aid, and it would be fiscally and politically infeasible for the United States to foot the bill in such a deal.
- Ring vaccination is at once rendered hopelessly infeasible; and whatever the quantity of vaccine available, assume inadequate distribution channels - which is not at all unlikely.
- It may sound totally infeasible but something has to be done to help the lower League clubs to survive.
- This image of global dominance is undeniably appealing to some Americans, but the history of the past few years also demonstrates how infeasible it is.
- Amnesty might be ideal but it is politically infeasible and creates credibility problems the application of future penalties.
- But armed revolution, too, was infeasible, even if it had been desirable.
- Then there are those things which could be changed but any party serious about running the country would find infeasible to change.
- Many computational tasks, such as decodings or the factorization of very large numbers, would become feasible that are infeasible with present machines.
- The Kremlin's claim that negotiations are infeasible will be justified, and Chechens who seek alternatives to war will be silenced.
- And borrowing abroad was infeasible, given the uncertain political situation and the disastrous legacy of inter-war loans.
Derivatives nounɪnfiːzɪˈbɪlɪti In all of these exercises, we use incomplete information of varying degrees necessitated by the infeasibility and impracticality of collecting complete information. Example sentencesExamples - For example, James Longstreet's protest to Robert E. Lee on the infeasibility of Pickett's Charge is well-known.
- If there is none, terminate, for the problem is infeasible, and the coefficients of the slack variables represent a certificate of infeasibility.
- These concerns tended to stay out of the forefront of public attention, however, due to the slow pace of population change and the relative infeasibility of policy interventions.
- One might argue against such strictness and point out its infeasibility, pointlessness and even potential harmfulness, at the levels of both clinical practice and inter-professional relationships.
Definition of infeasible in US English: infeasibleadjectiveɪnˈfizəbəlinˈfēzəbəl Not possible to do easily or conveniently; impracticable. Example sentencesExamples - This image of global dominance is undeniably appealing to some Americans, but the history of the past few years also demonstrates how infeasible it is.
- Inadequate child care means that many recipients must forgo job opportunities or find it infeasible to keep a job for very long.
- To exhaustively search all possible networks is infeasible, in practice, even with high-performance computers.
- As long as this rule is ingrained in our culture, effective solutions to our worst problems will be politically infeasible, and politically feasible solutions will be ineffective or destructive.
- At this point, we have not seen anything to make us believe that a five-year $10 billion fabricator project, starting today, would be infeasible…
- Will even the basic act of indexing the Web soon become infeasible?
- If they do, most of them fail after the first phase when initial research shows the technology to be infeasible at this time, or not worth the expenditures in the long run.
- This cooperation has to go beyond the symptomatic such as use of protective devices on commercial planes, which may be too expensive, or securing airport perimeters, which may be infeasible.
- A space elevator still seems infeasible and I think a large scale space station that could operate as a docking port and even an assembly facility is probably too much of an initial expenditure.
- Ring vaccination is at once rendered hopelessly infeasible; and whatever the quantity of vaccine available, assume inadequate distribution channels - which is not at all unlikely.
- Amnesty might be ideal but it is politically infeasible and creates credibility problems the application of future penalties.
- It may sound totally infeasible but something has to be done to help the lower League clubs to survive.
- The Kremlin's claim that negotiations are infeasible will be justified, and Chechens who seek alternatives to war will be silenced.
- China won't be responsible for all this economic aid, and it would be fiscally and politically infeasible for the United States to foot the bill in such a deal.
- As I'm fond of pointing out, it's not that going back to the moon is infeasible; it's that the knowledge to do so isn't living knowledge - it's all in books and not in active, working minds.
- This may be almost as infeasible as asking everybody to work Easter Monday, and I am sure there would be practical difficulties involved, especially with on-call rotas and part time workers.
- And borrowing abroad was infeasible, given the uncertain political situation and the disastrous legacy of inter-war loans.
- Then there are those things which could be changed but any party serious about running the country would find infeasible to change.
- But armed revolution, too, was infeasible, even if it had been desirable.
- Many computational tasks, such as decodings or the factorization of very large numbers, would become feasible that are infeasible with present machines.
|