| adjektiv |
| 1. |
incomplete - not complete or total; not completed; "an incomplete account of his life"; "political consequences of incomplete military success"; "an incomplete forward pass" |
| |
|
uncomplete |
| |
|
complete having every necessary or normal part or component or step; "a complete meal"; "a complete wardrobe"; "a complete set of the Britannica"; "a complete set of china"; "a complete defeat"; "a complete accounting"
|
| |
|
fractional constituting or comprising a part or fraction of a possible whole or entirety; "a fractional share of the vote"; "a partial dose"
|
| |
|
completeness (logic) an attribute of a logical system that is so constituted that a contradiction arises if any proposition is introduced that cannot be derived from the axioms of the system
|
| |
|
broken physically and forcibly separated into pieces or cracked or split; "a broken mirror"; "a broken tooth"; "a broken leg"; "his neck is broken"
|
| |
|
half (of siblings) related through one parent only; "a half brother"; "half sister"
|
| |
|
neither not either; not one or the other
|
| |
|
partial being or affecting only a part; not total; "a partial description of the suspect"; "partial collapse"; "a partial eclipse"; "a partial monopoly"; "partial immunity"
|
| |
|
rudimentary being in the earliest stages of development; "rudimentary plans"
|
| |
|
sketchy,
unelaborated giving only major points; lacking completeness; "a sketchy account"; "details of the plan remain sketchy"
|
| |
|
uncompleted not caught or not caught within bounds; "an uncompleted pass"
|
| 2. |
incomplete - not yet finished; "his thesis is still incomplete"; "an uncompleted play" |
| |
|
uncompleted |
| |
|
unfinished not brought to an end or conclusion; "unfinished business"; "the building is still unfinished"
|