Definitionn. the quality of language that is comprehensible
Last update: August 30, 2015
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Clarity in expression promotes intelligibility. [Please select]
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But, secondly, the pneumatic utterances technically known as speaking with tongues failed to reach this level of intelligibility; for Paul compares "a tongue" to a material object which should merely make a noise, to a pipe or harp twanged or blown at random without tune or time, to a trumpet blaring idly and not according to a code of signal notes. [Please select]
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The primary facts upon which rests intelligibility in reading are emphasis and inflection. [Please select]
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To the third group those dreams belong which are void of both meaning and intelligibility; they are _incoherent, complicated, and meaningless_. [Please select]
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These have the same time, meaning, and intelligibility as we found in the dreams which recorded a desire. [Please select]
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I have done what I could for the first kind of intelligibility. [Please select]
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A book should have either intelligibility or correctness; to combine the two is impossible, but to lack both is to be unworthy of such a place as Euclid has occupied in education. [Please select]
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Nay, more, this chance-conception, now become so current, many have endeavoured to explain by examples which seemed to render any inquiries regarding its intelligibility quite needless. [Please select]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!