Langimage
English

unfeasibly-changed

|un-fea-si-bly-changed|

C2

/ʌnˈfiːzəbli tʃeɪndʒd/

impractically altered

Etymology
Etymology Information

'unfeasibly-changed' originates from the combination of 'unfeasible' and 'changed', where 'unfeasible' means 'not capable of being done or carried out' and 'changed' means 'made different'.

Historical Evolution

'Unfeasible' comes from the Latin word 'facere', meaning 'to do', combined with the prefix 'un-', indicating negation. 'Changed' comes from the Old French 'changier', meaning 'to alter'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'unfeasible' meant 'not capable of being done', and 'changed' meant 'made different'. Together, they imply a change that is impractical or impossible.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

changed in a manner that is not feasible or practical.

The project was unfeasibly-changed, making it impossible to complete on time.

Synonyms

Antonyms

feasibly-changedpractically-altered

Last updated: 2025/04/05 08:14