| incurab | He contracted an incurable disease. |
| incurab | He has an incurable disease. |
| incurab | That disease is incurable. |
| incurability | (n) incapability of being cured or healed, Syn. incurableness, Ant. curability, curableness |
| incurability | (n) incapability of being altered in disposition or habits, Example: the incurability of his optimism |
| incurable | (n) a person whose disease is incurable |
| incurable | (adj) incapable of being cured, Ant. curable, Example: an incurable disease; an incurable addiction to smoking |
| incurable | (adj) unalterable in disposition or habits, Example: an incurable optimist |
| incurably | (adv) to an incurable degree, Example: she was incurably optimistic |
| incurably | (adv) in a manner impossible to cure, Example: he is incurably ill |
| Incurability | n. [ Cf. F. incurabilité incurability, LL. incurabilitas negligence. ] The state of being incurable; irremediableness. Harvey. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Incurable | n. A person diseased beyond cure. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Incurable | a. [ F. incurable, L. incurabilis. See In- not, and Curable. ] [ 1913 Webster ] A scirrhus is not absolutely incurable. Arbuthnot. [ 1913 Webster ] Rancorous and incurable hostility. Burke. [ 1913 Webster ] They were laboring under a profound, and, as it might have seemed, an almost incurable ignorance. Sir J. Stephen. |
| Incurableness | n. The state of being incurable; incurability. Boyle. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Incurably | adv. In a manner that renders cure impracticable or impossible; irremediably. “Incurably diseased.” Bp. Hall. “Incurably wicked.” Blair. [ 1913 Webster ] |