অপরিণত
(1) Only partly in existence; imperfectly formed
(2) Only partly in existence
(3) Imperfectly formed
(4) Undeveloped
(5) Beginning
(1) The u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510information societyu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is only explicable in terms of the future, of its ultimate limits rather than its incipient, inchoate beginnings.
(2) We saw all the early inchoate gestures of the alternative comedy movement when it was still alternative, and before it had swamped the festival with its commercial machine.
(3) Prosecutors now target some of the same conduct with other statutes, such as conspiracy statutes and inchoate crimes, in order to accomplish the same goal of preventing extremist groups from acting on their ideologies.
(4) Musicals answered my need to give that inchoate adolescent passion form, to embrace experience and then see a pattern in its marks on me.
(5) I loved the way she could draw you into an inchoate world where half-expressed motivations were always shifting and uneasy - everything was undercurrent, it was all subtext and no text.
(6) Moreover, new power structures and established institutions invariably come to replace the old ones, and any initial glow of inchoate democracy can easily be undermined by the rising centers of symbolic power.
(7) Conspiracy is one of the three inchoate offences in English criminal law, to be discussed in Chapter 11 below, but conspiracy may also be charged when the acts agreed upon have actually been committed.
(8) Buried somewhere in this inchoate play is a potentially interesting idea about the way we all use theatrical games as a protection against life.
(9) Not that I was a musical illiterate: I did enjoy the light-classical pieces, some of which inspired me to an inchoate creativity.
(10) My responses were probably stupid and certainly inchoate .
(11) This is essentially the key question in deciding on the appropriate basis for the criminal responsibility required for commission of the inchoate offences of incitement, conspiracy and attempt.
(12) The essence of conspiracy is inchoate and the criminality is not to be judged merely by reference to those objectives which are actually achieved.
(13) A native title u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510claimu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is not technically made for recompense for past loss, but for the recognition of current but inchoate rights.
(14) This applies to clearly defined areas such as foreign affairs and education policy, as well as to more inchoate issues such as where tolerance of diversity begins and ends.
(15) All four had the inchoate desire to work in journalism when they applied to graduate school but felt clueless about how to get a serious job in journalism.
(16) They are thus left to float free in the sea of popular culture, without cultural or moral bearings and prey to the inchoate but deep resentments that this popular culture so successfully inculcates.
(17) Furthermore, the Reformed objection to natural theology, unformed and inchoate as it is, may best be seen as a rejection of classical foundationalism.
(18) Why can a conspirator be charged with both the inchoate offense of conspiracy and the robbery?
(19) The inchoate character of memory makes it difficult to know what is important about the past or, for that matter, what role the past plays in the present.
(20) Those who purge Darwin from America's schools must yell in order to drown out their own misgivings, the inchoate realization that they are barking at the moon.
rudimentary
undeveloped
unformed
immature
incipient
embryonic
beginning
fledgling
developing
adult
mature
ripe
Developed
Grown
Mature