unability

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English

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Etymology

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From un- +‎ ability.

Noun

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unability (usually uncountable, plural unabilities)

  1. Lack of ability; inability.
    • 1603, Michel de Montaigne, chapter 12, in John Florio, transl., The Essayes [], book II, London: [] Val[entine] Simmes for Edward Blount [], →OCLC:
      difficulty doth not make me despaire, much lesse my unability: for it is but mine owne.
    • 1644, John Milton, Areopagitica:
      there being so many whose businesse and profession meerly it is, to be the champions of Truth; which if they neglect, what can be imputed but their sloth, or unability?
    • 1999, Albert J. Widmann, The Stone Age of Faith:
      Until today we have not made much progress over Democrit who postulated that it is only our unability to register and explain a great number of fast events in a non-linear way, i.e. not according to the principle of cause and effect.
    • 1999, Christian Bühler, Harry Knops, Assistive Technology on the Threshold of the New Millennium:
      For the most common unabilities of disabled and older to perform different tasks in the kitchen, some adapted elements, including a robot-arm, have been designed.
    • 2012, Johan H. C. Reiber, P.W. Serruys, Advances in Quantitative Coronary Arteriography:
      Failures were related to the unability to selectively place the guiding catheter at the coronary ostium in 2 cases and to the unability to cross the lesion in 8 cases.
    • 2012, Walter Berger, Financial Innovations in International Debt Management:
      Equally ambivalent is the attempt to operationalize country risk by differentiating a sovereign debtor's "unability" and "unwillingness" to pay.
    • 2012, Julian F. Johnson, Roger S. Porter, Liquid Crystals and Ordered Fluids - Volume 2:
      The main factors that determine the location of the boundaries for the region of existence of a phase and thus its transition to another phase seem to be its ability or unability to incorporate water.