What's the difference between incommunicability and incommunicable?
Incommunicability
Definition:
(n.) The quality or state of being incommunicable, or incapable of being imparted.
Example Sentences:
(1) Prophylactic examination of the population, education of a district physician in methods of primary and secondary prophylaxis of chronic incommunicable diseases, the availability of health educational literature brought about an increase in the volume of therapeutic, diagnostic and preventive activities in this district, however they did not have great influence on the prevalence of risk factors in the population over a 2-year period.
(2) In the third case, with an incommunicant, isolated pulmonary cyst, the outcome would have been favourable even without a prenatal diagnosis.
(3) Hunting connects some people to an atavistic and otherwise incommunicable instinct that can, they say, lead to some visceral sense of oneness with the natural world.
(4) In his early years as a journalist he developed the technique of two notebooks: one allowed him to earn his living with the bread and butter of agency reporting of facts, while the other was filled with the experiences he too modestly believed incommunicable, but which became his famous books, such as The Emperor (1978), on the fall of that extraordinary figure Haile Selassie of Ethiopia.
(5) We know how language fails us, how often we feel helpless, how the experience is, finally, incommunicable."
(6) We carried many incommunicable things and I realised at a certain point … that I would have to write this book.” Over 12 years he wrote five drafts that he deemed deficient and burned, but he was intent on finishing before his father died.
(7) The waking up period appears divided in two parts: "apparent incommunicability" and "waking in strangeness".
(8) Deafness and psychosis are two, among the processus of recoiling from the world, where the human being's incommunicability is in question.
Incommunicable
Definition:
(a.) Not communicable; incapable of being communicated, shared, told, or imparted, to others.
Example Sentences:
(1) Prophylactic examination of the population, education of a district physician in methods of primary and secondary prophylaxis of chronic incommunicable diseases, the availability of health educational literature brought about an increase in the volume of therapeutic, diagnostic and preventive activities in this district, however they did not have great influence on the prevalence of risk factors in the population over a 2-year period.
(2) In the third case, with an incommunicant, isolated pulmonary cyst, the outcome would have been favourable even without a prenatal diagnosis.
(3) Hunting connects some people to an atavistic and otherwise incommunicable instinct that can, they say, lead to some visceral sense of oneness with the natural world.
(4) In his early years as a journalist he developed the technique of two notebooks: one allowed him to earn his living with the bread and butter of agency reporting of facts, while the other was filled with the experiences he too modestly believed incommunicable, but which became his famous books, such as The Emperor (1978), on the fall of that extraordinary figure Haile Selassie of Ethiopia.
(5) We know how language fails us, how often we feel helpless, how the experience is, finally, incommunicable."
(6) We carried many incommunicable things and I realised at a certain point … that I would have to write this book.” Over 12 years he wrote five drafts that he deemed deficient and burned, but he was intent on finishing before his father died.
(7) The waking up period appears divided in two parts: "apparent incommunicability" and "waking in strangeness".
(8) Deafness and psychosis are two, among the processus of recoiling from the world, where the human being's incommunicability is in question.