What's the difference between contemplatable and imponderable?

Contemplatable


Definition:

Example Sentences:

Imponderable


Definition:

  • (a.) Not ponderable; without sensible or appreciable weight; incapable of being weighed.
  • (n.) An imponderable substance or body; specifically, in the plural, a name formerly applied to heat, light, electricity, and magnetism, regarded as subtile fluids destitute of weight but in modern science little used.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) And “events” – the great imponderables of campaigns – have also been helping Labor.
  • (2) Certainly there are distinctive environmental, physiological and psychological problems that must be considered, but these should not be imponderable.
  • (3) Eurozone finance ministers are to meet in Brussels on Monday to ponder their options, but are unlikely to decide very much, given the political imponderables and the unresolved splits between German-led belt-tighteners and French-led proponents of growth policies as the answer to Europe's travails.
  • (4) Finally, it has been amply demonstrated that the resistance of the host is dependent on a variety of factors which include innate variables such as genetic endowment and a multitude of imponderable variables acquired through life experiences which can be considered under the general category of "host factors".
  • (5) It is suggested that, while base rates are largely imponderable, the prior probabilities of individual cases are not.
  • (6) Notwithstanding these positive caveats, the vagaries and imponderables of the commercial world still prevail.
  • (7) True, society offers many kinds of assistance and support; it nevertheless is very much a matter of how the individual concerned reacts to the positive and negative influences and imponderabilities encountered.
  • (8) The imponderableness of the causal meaning of biographical events is demonstrated.
  • (9) The limit values prescribed by German drinking water regulations for "pesticides and their toxic main metabolites" (PBSM) protect the consumer from imponderable toxicological risks.
  • (10) "Having spoken to the complainants, Ms Levitt QC has concluded that, although there are a number of imponderables, had the police and prosecutors taken a different approach a prosecution might have been possible in relation to three of the four allegations."
  • (11) They really mean to say: 'he's taking on a pot or baulk imponderable here'.
  • (12) Why someone is prepared to is one of life’s imponderables: you can’t eat it, live in it or wear it, so by any logical measure, a work of art should be worth next to nothing.
  • (13) As Salazar wrote in his recent autobiography: "Running a marathon is in many ways an imponderable exercise.
  • (14) More severe chronic symptoms are generally required as indication for mitral valve replacement because of the additional long-term imponderabilities imposed by an implanted artificial device.
  • (15) This type of vaccine contains certain imponderables which argue against widespread vaccination.
  • (16) However, the actual survivorship attained will ultimately be determined by currently imponderable factors such as patient acceptance of longterm screening, frequency of multicentric respiratory cancers, and incidence of noncancerous smoking-related diseases, especially chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and ischemic heart disease.
  • (17) There are all sorts of imponderables, from the size of the dose to the timing and location of the injection to the critical issue of whether the stem cells will survive inside the body, which mean it will be years before we have any clear idea as to whether this is going to work.
  • (18) In spite of imponderables which affect the failure rate in the "clinical trial", a positive result was obtained on first vaccination in 85%.
  • (19) The biggest imponderable is perhaps whether the AfD, an anti-euro party, makes it into parliament.

Words possibly related to "contemplatable"