Langimage
English

unintegrable

|un-in-te-gra-ble|

C2

/ʌnˈɪntɪɡrəbl/

(integrable)

capable of being integrated

Base FormNounNoun
integrablenon-integrabilityunintegrability
Etymology
Etymology Information

'unintegrable' originates from the prefix 'un-' meaning 'not' and the word 'integrable', which comes from Latin 'integrāre', meaning 'to make whole'.

Historical Evolution

'integrāre' transformed into the English word 'integrate', and with the addition of the prefix 'un-', it became 'unintegrable'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'integrāre' meant 'to make whole', but 'unintegrable' evolved to mean 'not capable of being integrated'.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

not capable of being integrated, especially in mathematical contexts.

The function was found to be unintegrable over the given interval.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/07/06 18:20