Definition of Inarable

1. a. Not arable.

Definition of Inarable

1. Adjective. Not arable. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Inarable

1. not arable [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Inarable

inappropriate affect
inappropriate hormone
inappropriately
inappropriateness
inappropriatenesses
inapproximability
inapproximable
inapt
inaptitude
inaptitudes
inaptly
inaptness
inaptnesses
inaquate
inaquation
inarable (current term)
inarch
inarched
inarches
inarching
inarguable
inarguably
inarm
inarmed
inarming
inarms
inartful
inartfully
inarticulability
inarticulable

Literary usage of Inarable

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

1. The Model Etymology: With Sentences Showing the Correct Use of Words; and a by Anne C. Webb (1869)
"The first donation (124) to Culpepper and Arlington, comprised (409) only forests and inarable lands; but finally the colonists had to yield some of their ..."

2. House Documents, Otherwise Publ. as Executive Documents: 13th Congress, 2d by United States Congress. House (1880)
"No timber of value is found npon the Ur:- streams ; only the cottonwood, and quite limited as to quantity, yet serving the pi- pose of fuel. inarable, ..."

3. The Writings of Thomas Jefferson by Thomas Jefferson (1904)
"ering how much inarable land it contains, can clothe and feed without a material change in the quality of their diet. But are there no inconveniences to be ..."

4. The Papers of James Madison: Purchased by Order of the Congress, Being His by James Madison (1840)
"... inarable surface, there will, in a century or little more, be nearly as crowded a population in the United States as in Great Britain or France, ..."

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