What's the difference between immensurable and unmeasurable?
Immensurable
Definition:
(a.) Immeasurable.
Example Sentences:
Unmeasurable
Definition:
(a.) Immeasurable.
Example Sentences:
(1) The possibility that selective bias or unmeasured environmental differences might explain the difference in BP between the two groups is discussed.
(2) In 31 patients in whom specific IgE fell to low (less than 6% counts bound) or unmeasurable levels, immunotherapy was discontinued, and sting challenge was carried out 1 to 3 years later.
(3) The doses used did not reduce plasma angiotensin II maximally despite reduction of plasma renin activity to unmeasurable levels.
(4) To establish uniform levels of endogenous calcitriol and its precursors, all rabbits had been depleted of vitamin D. The depletion was demonstrated by their serum calcidiol and calcitriol levels declining to unmeasurable levels, following the regimen of a vitamin D-free diet.
(5) The great variability in peripheral vision changes for the groups with high life stress suggests that, for certain subjects, some unmeasured variable may be buffering the adverse impact of high life-event stress.
(6) Subsequent variance components analysis suggested that unmeasured polygenic loci and unmeasured shared environmental factors together account for at least an additional 36.7% of the variability in normalized fasting plasma glucose, with genes alone accounting for at least 27.3%.
(7) In contrast, endothelial water diffusional permeability is so high as to be unmeasurable.
(8) GSSG was present in cultured rat hepatocytes in only small amounts and becomes unmeasurable after four days of culture.
(9) In contrast, six closely related non-nitrile ligands containing identical peptide side chains but having C-terminal groups incapable of binding covalently to papain had unmeasureably high dissociation constants.
(10) The apparently significant reduction in symptoms experienced by some subjects in the absence of audiometric change suggests the operation of unmeasured factors in their response to treatment.
(11) Three patients had unmeasurable LH levels, while two had a normal number of low amplitude pulses.
(12) A small (unmeasured) drop of blood, such as is obtained from a finger puncture, is placed on disposable cover slip and inserted in the sample holder of the instrument.
(13) Because it has long been recognized that the growth of most untreated tumors is well described by Gompertzian or exponential growth curves but that the growth of treated tumors has never been well characterized mathematically, we developed and applied an equation that, while not dependent on restrictive assumptions or unmeasurable variables, was nevertheless capable of describing perturbed as well as unperturbed growth.
(14) The blood pressure was unmeasurable and the peripheral pulse could not be felt.
(15) The pool activity of G1 cells was unmeasurable but rose to maximum values at the border of the G1-S phase.
(16) Unstimulated saliva samples were collected from 20 patients; however, saliva volumes from 10 pediatric patients were inadequate to permit analysis by FPIA, and 1 other had unmeasurable concentrations by both methods.
(17) The operative blood loss during the endoscopic dissection stage was unmeasurable in four patients and amounted to 300 ml in one.
(18) Whether this might occur depends in part on the nature of the accompanying anion (if the etiology of the hypermagnesemia is an exogenous load of magnesium), as well as on the presence of concomitant changes in endogenous unmeasured anions.
(19) In separate analyses of cholesterol and betalipoprotein levels, a complete model that includes the effects of the six apo E genotypes, unmeasured polygenes, and individual specific environmental effects fits these data significantly better than a reduced model that does not include the effects of the apo E polymorphism or a reduced model that does not include the effects of polygenes.
(20) A one-step cassette contains all components necessary to run the test and includes blood filtration and automatic sample measurement, so that unmeasured finger-stick whole-blood specimens can be analyzed by the non-technically trained user.