Definition of Incoordinations

1. incoordination [n] - See also: incoordination

Lexicographical Neighbors of Incoordinations

inconvenient
inconveniently
inconversable
inconversant
inconverted
inconvertibility
inconvertible
inconvertibleness
inconvertibly
inconvincible
inconvincibly
incony
incoop
incoordinate
incoordination
incoordinations (current term)
incoronate
incorporable
incorporal
incorporality
incorporally
incorporate
incorporated
incorporated company
incorporates
incorporating
incorporation
incorporations
incorporative
incorporator

Literary usage of Incoordinations

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

1. Diseases of the nervous system by Smith Ely Jelliffe, William Alanson White (1917)
"Motor incoordinations.—Motor incoordinations, from initial trembling to more high-grade ataxias, apraxias, ..."

2. Nervous and mental disease monograph series (1918)
"Such incoordinations are forms of dissociation because the effort to produce a thing correctly is dissociated sufficiently to permit the injection of ..."

3. Psychology, General Introduction by Charles Hubbard Judd (1917)
"If one learns some manual art, he finds that the incoordinations with which he begins are only gradually eliminated ; but finally he learns the combination ..."

4. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1915)
"... ataxia differs from the ordinary ataxia as seen in tabes, and presents distinguishing features which differ from other muscular incoordinations. ..."

5. The Freudian Wish and Its Place in Ethics by Edwin Bissell Holt (1915)
"... forgetfulness, motor incoordinations, bad dreams, or hallucinations, until he has studied Freud's cases and learned to read the sort of subconscious ..."

6. Manual of Mental and Physical Tests: A Book of Directions Compiled with by Guy Montrose Whipple (1914)
"... (ft) diminishing their recorded height, (c) confusing their number or arrangement, or (rf' causing the appearance of various motor incoordinations, ..."

7. A Study of British Genius by Havelock Ellis (1904)
"The clumsiness and other muscular incoordinations which we have found to be prevalent,—while there is good reason to believe that they are of congenital ..."

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