View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Incongruent.
Incongruent
Incongruent meaning
Out of place, incompatible, inharmonious, not congruent. | Of or relating to two numbers that have different remainders when divided by a third number
Synonyms of Incongruent
Example sentences (11)
The incongruent balance between fundamentals and stock price for $) represent an investment opportunity imo - however, the timeframe for when the price starts to reflect the fundamentals is anyone's guess.
Guo claimed to have divested ownership of Baofu, but the DILG believes the amount she divested it for – P2.5 million – was “grossly incongruent to her investment on Baufo which is approximately eight hectares of land”.
Unquestionably, the idea that a nation was to be born from the incongruent wars of primary resistance found urgency in the broad assembly and national character of the liberation movement, SWAPO.
Later in the ruling, however, the chief justice wrote that the voting rights rationale offered by Mr. Ross depended on an “incongruent” explanation that wasn’t supported by proper evidence.
Ms Hill said the quid pro quo amounted to a “domestic political errand” that was incongruent with America’s foreign policy goals.
Sound a little offbeat, but there are more incongruent characters, the quirky monk, the village school disrupter, the school teacher trying to keep order, the village Chief with his own agenda.
Incongruent dissolution Many substances dissolve congruently; i.e., the composition of the solid and the dissolved solute stoichiometrically match.
Incongruent individuals, in their pursuit of positive regard, lead lives that include falseness and do not realize their potential.
Rogers suggested that the incongruent individual, who is always on the defensive and cannot be open to all experiences, is not functioning ideally and may even be malfunctioning.
Using the example of Marcus' speech, Reese argues that the audience is disconnected from the violence through the seemingly incongruent descriptions of that violence.
Where apparent contradictions arise between such interpretations, we might call the interpretations "incongruent", rather than dubbing either "false", because using many-valued logic implies that a measured value is a mixture of two extreme possibilities.