Definition of Infrangibility

1. n. The quality or state of being infrangible; infrangibleness.

Definition of Infrangibility

1. Noun. The quality of being infrangible. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Infrangibility

1. [n -TIES]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Infrangibility

inframammary region
inframandibular
inframarginal
inframaxillary
inframe
inframedian
inframesenteric
inframesocolic
inframundane
infranatant
infranatant fluid
infranchise
infranchised
infranchises
infranchising
infrangibility (current term)
infrangible
infrangibleness
infrangibly
infranodal extrasystole
infraocclusion
infraocular
infraorbital
infraorbital canal
infraorbital foramen
infraorbital groove
infraorbital margin
infraorbital nerve
infraorbital region

Literary usage of Infrangibility

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Henley's Twentieth Century Forrmulas, Recipes and Processes: Containing Ten by Gardner Dexter Hiscox (1914)
"... even in the cast state, and to retain it after being worked in red heat. pecially useful where infrangibility is desired, as in machinery, ordnance, ..."

2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1898)
"... Considering the extreme portability and infrangibility of these films and their inestimable superiority in these respects over glass, ..."

3. The Gentleman's Magazine (1861)
"Mr. King is speaking of the Diamond : — " Pliny goes on to repeat the jeweller's fiction as to the infrangibility of the ..."

4. Macmillan's Magazine by David Masson, George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris (1869)
"... the Lockian philosophy and its crimes, about physics and metaphysics, about demiurgic atoms and the preternatural infrangibility of ele- i Vol. ii. pp. ..."

5. A System of Instruction in Quantitative Chemical Analysis by C. Remigius Fresenius (1893)
"... the latter are always preferred, on account of their comparative lightness and infrangibility, and because they are more readily heated to redness. ..."

6. Quantitative Chemical Analysis by C. Remigius Fresenius (1903)
"... the latter are always preferred, on account of their comparative lightness and infrangibility, and because they are more readily heated to redness. ..."

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