(a.) Not consolable; incapable of being consoled; grieved beyond susceptibility of comfort; disconsolate.
Example Sentences:
(1) Finally, common concerns of the newborn period (inconsolable crying, apnea, respiratory irregularities, jaundice, risk of infection, gastrointestinal problems, and acute eye disorders) are discussed in conjunction with aspects of the differential diagnosis and indications for referral.
(2) Corneal abrasion should be considered when inconsolable crying appears in an otherwise asymptomatic infant.
(3) One Tonibler arrived in Pristina after the show was over and is said to have been inconsolable; a few more were invited but did not appear.
(4) FTT children were perceived overall as more stressful, less adaptable, more inconsolable, and more unhappy than were healthy children.
(5) Even two weeks into the life of the coalition, the new business secretary looked inconsolable.
(6) That was until Geri left, and I cried inconsolably to Goodbye on repeat.
(7) Moments later Dann looked inconsolable after Dame N’Doye drifted inside from the right, met Jermain Defoe’s pass and, from around 25 yards, dispatched an apparently benign shot that took a hefty deflection off the centre-half’s boot before looping beyond the wrong-footed Hennessey.
(8) Inconsolable crying is a disturbing symptom in young infants.
(9) Westwood and some of his team-mates were inconsolable at full time but the future is bright at Hillsborough and when the pain of failing to jump the final fence subsides there will be cause to be proud and, maybe most important of all for the blue side of Sheffield, optimism at what is to follow.
(10) He would depart at the end inconsolable with tears stinging his eyes.
(11) Infants with colic (n = 65) were selected on the basis of the mother's report of a history of inconsolable crying lasting several hours each day.
(12) He’s not that kind of character [to be inconsolable]: he’s strong mentally and resolute when it comes to errors.
(13) The committee found that the evidence indicates a causal relation between DTP vaccine and anaphylaxis and between the pertussis component of DTP vaccine and extended periods of inconsolable crying or screaming.
(14) was Ally Carnwath’s take James Blake – Overgrown The London producer with the voice like a bruise remains perennially inconsolable here.
(15) He remained inconsolable and silent throughout, a lonely man in a crowded room.
(16) The collective narrative of the moment seemed to demand that Mandela look stricken, inconsolable – and mortal.
(17) The following is a case report of an infant who presented with inconsolable crying caused by a corneal abrasion.
(18) According to Collins German dictionary, the word means "hopeless, miserable, wretched or inconsolable" First it was the might of the emerging economic superpowers, Brazil and China.
(19) On Monday night on Sky News, Paul Murray was inconsolable.
(20) Yet the man in the dock was evidently inconsolable.
Unconsolable
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) The CES-D score was associated with unconsolability and excessive crying (p less than 0.01).
(2) When potentially confounding variables, such as cigarette smoking, alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine use, poor weight gain, income, birth weight, and other drug use, were controlled, the relationship between CES-D score and newborn unconsolability and excessive crying remain unchanged.
(3) Mothers with CES-D scores at the 90th percentile were 2.6 times more likely to have unconsolable newborns, compared with women with CES-D scores at the 10th percentile (95% C.I.
(4) Those wishing to experience one of his more topsy-turvy worlds should step into the dreamy, fog-bordered lanscape of The Unconsoled.
(5) The higher the mother's CES-D score, the more likely it was that the infant would be unconsolable or cry excessively.
(6) We describe a 10-day-old boy with aspecific clinical manifestations (unconsolable crying).