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Definition of Nonexistent
1. Adjective. Not having existence or being or actuality. "Chimeras are nonexistent"
Also: Extinct
Similar to: Absent, Lacking, Missing, Wanting, Barren, Destitute, Devoid, Free, Innocent, Nonextant, Vanished
Antonyms: Existent
Derivative terms: Nonexistence
Definition of Nonexistent
1. a. Not having existence.
Definition of Nonexistent
1. Adjective. Not existent; not real. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Nonexistent
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Nonexistent
Literary usage of Nonexistent
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Kabbalah for Beginners by Michael Laitman (2007)
"A nonexistent REALITY Now that we understand what we can study and what we can't,
let's see what we are actually studying and perceiving through our senses. ..."
2. Kabbalah Revealed: The Ordinary Person's Guide to a More Peaceful Life by Michael Laitman (2007)
"A nonexistent REALITY Now that we understand what we can study and what we can't,
let's see what we are actually studying through our senses. ..."
3. Robert Montgomery and His Reviewers: With Some Remarks on the Present State by Edward Clarkson (1830)
"... coldly supine, or probably nonexistent at the first promising dawn of his
reputation, the light and heat of his progressive rise to the zenith appear to ..."
4. Modern Accounting, Its Principles and Some of Its Problems by Henry Rand Hatfield (1909)
"The argument that unsubscribed and unissued stock must not appear at all in the
accounts of the company because it is nonexistent is somewhat specious. ..."
5. Original Sanskrit Texts on the Origin and History of the People of India by John Muir (1872)
"Here, by the word ' nonexistent,' a state of void (or absolute nullity), like
that expressed in the phrase ' a hare's horns,' is not intended; ..."
6. Original Sanskrit Texts on the Origin and Progress of the Religion and by John Muir (1872)
"Here, by the word ' nonexistent,' a state of void (or absolute nullity), like
that expressed in the phrase ' a hare's horns,' is not intended ; but simply a ..."
7. The Ante-Nicene Fathers: Translations of the Writings of the Fathers Down to by Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, Arthur Cleveland Coxe (1886)
"For every nature desires that (nonexistent one), on account of a superabundance
of beauty and bloom. Each (nature desires this), however, after a different ..."