different between infeasible vs implausible

infeasible

English

Etymology

From in- +? feasible. Cognate to French infaisable.

Adjective

infeasible (comparative more infeasible, superlative most infeasible)

  1. not feasible
    Antonym: feasible

Usage notes

Usage varies between infeasible, unfeasible, and “not feasible” – all are synonymous, but usage varies regionally and over time, and unfamiliar usage is often jarring or sounds wrong. Today infeasible is somewhat more common in American usage, though traditionally unfeasible was more common, being surpassed by infeasible in the late 1970s (in both America and Britain). Of these, infeasible is etymologically pure – formed of French/Latin roots – and cognate to French infaisable, while unfeasible is hybrid, combining Germanic un- with Latinate feasible.

Derived terms

Translations

References

infeasible From the web:

  • what infeasible means
  • infeasible what does it means
  • what is infeasible solution
  • what is infeasible solution in lpp
  • what is infeasible solution in simplex method
  • what is infeasible region
  • what is infeasible project
  • what is infeasible path


implausible

English

Etymology

From im- +? plausible.

Adjective

implausible (comparative more implausible, superlative most implausible)

  1. Not plausible; unlikely; dubious.
    • 2008, February 17, Mark Liberman, "More on Harper", Language Log,
      Harper finds the idea that Latin developed into the modern Romance languages too implausible to believe.

Synonyms

  • (not plausible): unplausible

Translations

implausible From the web:

  • what implausible means
  • what implausible means in spanish
  • implausible what is the definition
  • what does implausible signal mean
  • what does implausible fuel volume mean
  • what does implausible engine torque mean
  • what is implausible deniability
  • what is implausible meter reading
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