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C O M P A T IB L E

111

C O M P L A IN IN G

 

COMPATIBLE — INCOMPATIBLE

 

 

COMPATIBILITY — INCOMPATIBILITY

Your

course

of life is incompatible

with your

position

in

the choir.

Poor

Man, 40

 

 

 

... entire and

pure forgiveness is not

incompatible with

a wounded

heart.

Martin, 46

 

 

 

Between justice and what was just, what inexorable incompatibility!

End, 269

These are the sort of things that aren’t supposed to hap­ pen. They leave them out of novels — these incom­ patibilities.

Ann, 299

COMPETENT — INCOMPETENT

COMPETENCE — INCOMPETENCE

... she was rather careless and incompetent.

Hullo, 151

... the official, unless he is dishonest, unbelievably dis­ solute, or incompetent to the point of idiocy, is ab­ solutely secure.

Room, 160

... this article became almost symbolical of the prevail­ ing habitual incompetence with which all this sys­ tem of questions is still handled.

Marriage, 381

I’m sick of your blundering incompetence, Brodie.

Hatter’s, 558

COMPLAINING — UNCOMPLAINING

... who sat with the child by his side,— a little more

dejected perhaps, but quite silent and uncomplain­ ing.

Curiosity, 224

C O M P L A IN IN G

112 -

C O M P L IM E N T A R Y

... he most embodied the principle of uncomplaining service...

End, 194

COMPLETE — INCOMPLETE

COMPLETED — UNCOMPLETED

... It must be observed, or the illustration would be incomplete...

Curiosity, 441

It showed how dreadfully incomplete was her under­ standing of his true position in this world.

Tragedy, 437

There’s just the lovers — the real enduring lovers; and the uncompleted people who’ve failed to find it.

Marriage, 205

COMPLICATED — UNCOMPLICATED

For a moment Essex was untouched and uncomplicated, and MacGregor understood something about Essex for the first time.

Diplomat, 377

‘‘You beautiful brute,” she said... “ You beautiful uncomplicated brute.”

Room, 113

COMPLIMENTARY — UNCOMPLIMENTARY

“ Well, Marchioness,” said Mr. Swiveller, “ that’s not uncomplimentary. ’ ’

Curiosity, 497

He said uncomplimentary things, called us sons of toads and damned us from hell to breakfast.

Bulls, 302

C OM POSED

113 -

C O M P R E H E N D IN G

 

COMPOSED — DISCOMPOSED

 

COMPOSURE — DISCOMPOSURE

... the lady

still appeared much ruffled and discompos­

ed by the degrading supposition.

Curiosity, 231

 

 

The look he gave discomposed me, as though I had been responsible for his state...

Jim , 162

... the attempt increased his discomposure.

Egoist, 176

... tobacco smoke always caused him great internal discomposure and annoyance.

Curiosity, 103

COMPREHENSIBLE — INCOMPREHENSIBLE COMPREHENSIBLY — INCOMPREHENSIBLY COMPREHENDING — UNCOMPREHENDING COMPREHENDINGLY — UNCOMPREHENDINGLY

Then, Mr. Rouncewell,” returns Sir Leicester, “ the application of what you have said is, to me, incom­

prehensible.” — “ Will it be more comprehensible,

Sir Leicester, if I say...”

Bleak, 412

Most of it had been incomprehensible to her, or com­ prehensible in a way that checked further curiosity...

Ann, 101

There is no other way of shunning a marriage she is incomprehensibly but frantically averse to.

Egoist 462

And the woman is dead now,” he added incomprehen­ sibly.

Jim , 211

She waved them a faintly uncomprehending good-bye...

Batter's, 647

C O M P R E H E N D I N G

114 -

CONCEIVED

He appeared at first uncomprehending, then confounded, and at last amazed...

Jim , 91

The builder... scratched his head uncomprehendingly with his pencil...

Hatter's, 72

COMPROMISING — UNCOMPROMISING COMPROMISINGLY — UNCOMPROMISINGLY

She had not forgotten the uncompromising way in which eight years ago he had asked her to become his mis­ tress, and the still more uncompromising way in which he had fled from her...

End, 482

... by uncompromising attack on the coalition.

Hullo, 178

...the ruddy face had become uncompromisingly hard.

Crusaders, 31

Something which was uncompromisingly real, some­ thing which I couldn’t avoid, but which I felt ashamedly I was trying to avoid.

Room, 114

CONCEIVABLE — INCONCEIVABLE

CONCEIVED — UNCONCEIVED

To Pettinger defeat was inconceivable.

Crusaders, 382

Being a Charwell... she was part of an institution, Condaford without Charwell being still almost inconceiv­ able.

End, 27

...they had... smelt of old date a doomed colossus of egoism in that unborn, unconceived inheritor of the stuff of the family.

Egoist, 27

C O N C EIVED

115 -

C O N C LU SIV ELY

..they spoke not to her of happy births or joyous weddings but of the sudden, unconceived disaster of death.

Hatter’s, 315

CONCERNED — UNCONCERNED

CONCERNEDLY — UNCONCERNEDLY

It concerned her in some way, but she herself was uncon­ cerned, and she slid without effort into the position of mistress of the farm.

Hurly-Burly, 21

Yasha, who until now had remained studiously uncon­ cerned, looked up.

Crusaders, 187

He put it on his shoulder and walked steadily and un­ concernedly on.

/ Wish, 52

“ Just think, mama,” began Bella most unconcerned­ ly and almost irrelevantly.

Tragedy, 159

CONCLUSIVE — INCONCLUSIVE

CONCLUSIVELY — INCONCLUSIVELY

1 was surprised to find, now that my prize was within my grasp, how Inconclusive its attainment seemed.

Invisible, 113

In dreams he toiled through a tangle of inconclusive tales, each filled with the same stress of sea and seawind...

Who Knew, 183

...she couldn't bear to leave things so inconclusively

broken off with Ken...

Hullo, 179

C O N D IT IO N A L

116 —

C O N G R U O U SL Y

CONDITIONAL — UNCONDITIONAL CONDITIONALLY — UNCONDITIONALLY

Ordinarily it was his custom to advise immediate and unconditional marriage.

Tragedy, 421

... she felt the injustice of such unnatural restraint, such unconditional limitation of her freedom...

Hatter’s, 90

He left everything to his daughter unconditionally,’ ’ replied Ashe.

Who Knew, 185

CONGENIAL — UNCONGENIAL

...to gather about her innocent face and pure intentions associates as strange and uncongenial as the grim objects that are about her bed when her history is first fore­ shadowed.

Curiosity, 4

... from which uncongenial sight he has turned shud­ dering...

Egoist, 460

CONGRUOUS — INCONGRUOUS

CONGRUOUSLY — INCONGRUOUSLY

CO NGRUITY — INCONGRUITY

It came to him as a thing absurd and incongruous

that

this should be his home.

 

Marriage,

416

He was proud of appearing in such incongruous attire — proud of the fact that he always made them look con­ gruous.

Brown, 203

... her silk stockings and high heels struck an incon­ gruously voluptuous note...

Room, 171

C 0 N G R U 1 T Y

117

CON SC IO U SLY

A sudden sense of her own inferiority, of her incongrui­ ty amongst the luxury and taste of her present sur­ roundings afflicted her...

Hatter’s, 594

He perceived for the first time the fundamental incon­ gruity of Marjorie’s position...

Marriage, 348

CONNECT — DISCONNECT

CONNECTED — UNCONNECTED

... he came from behind the bar and hung the out-of- order sign on the nickel piano and disconnected the

Plug.

 

' ’

438

 

 

 

Place,

There was a great deal

of discussion

rather unconnect­

ed with what he had

said...

Arrowsmith,

377

 

 

People not immediately connected with Monseigneur or the state, yet equally unconnected with anything that was real, or with lives passed in travelling by any straight road to any true earthly end, were no less abundant.

Tale, 122

CONSCIOUS — UNCONSCIOUS

CONSCIOUSLY — UNCONSCIOUSLY

...Miss Alden had been drowned while conscious — and not unconscious, as the state would have the Jury

believe...

Tragedy, II, 257

He was unconscious of the silence.

Picture, 42

The ignorant man does not know it, but yet conscious­ ly or unconsciously, he is attracted by it, and it alone.

Stoic, 380

C O N SC IO U SL Y

118

C O N S I D E R A B L E

She sauntered on

unobserved, noting unconsciously

that

in the whole extent of the quiet road no person

was

in

sight.

 

Hatter’s,

47

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONSEQUENT — INCONSEQUENT

 

 

CONSEQUENTLY — INCONSEQUENTLY

 

 

CONSEQUENTIAL — INCONSEQUENTIAL

 

She broke from the inconsequent,

meaningless, mild

tone

of

irony...

 

Egoist,

163

 

 

 

 

Then ’ he

somewhat

inconsequently

added...

 

 

 

 

 

Brown,

356

Then,

as

he moved away, he added

inconsequently...

 

 

 

 

Hatter's,

45

The letter he sent off was a humorous account of uniforms, badges, and small inconsequential incidents.

Crusaders, 611

... he was still convinced that the form of religious work his father essayed was of all forms the poorest and most inconsequential socially.

Tragedy, 184

CONSIDERABLE — INCONSIDERABLE

When I go into our little church on a Sunday, a consid­ erable part of the inconsiderable congregation expect to see me drop, scorched and withered, on the pavement under the Deadlock displeasure.

Bleak, 258

... he was devoting not an inconsiderable portion of

his free time to attempting to interest her...

Tragedy, 91

C O N S I D E R A T E

119

C O N S IS T E N T L Y

CONSIDERATE — INCONSIDERATE

 

CONSIDERATELY — INCONSIDERATELY

 

.. his plotting to keep

me here is

inconsiderate,

not

very wise.

 

Egoist,

250

 

 

His sturdy body plowed through without being incon­ siderate.

Crusaders, 206

... the person who had inconsiderately sent her to so great a distance by night and alone.

Curiosity, 10

.. a small but obtrusive wart which had most incon­ siderately chosen its location upon the extremity of his nose.

Hatter's, 76

CONSISTENT — INCONSISTENT

CONSISTENCY — INCONSISTENCY

CONSISTENTLY — INCONSISTENTLY

His affection for the child might not be inconsistent with villainy of the worst kind...

Curiosity, 21

It was not only that her father had said all sorts of in­ consistent and unreasonable things...

Ann, 120

Something more than a passing female inconsistency of mood.

Hullo, 29

All the same she was fully conscious of inconsistency.

End, 124

... she wandered illogically and inconsistently from one

urgent consideration to another...

Ann, 117

C O N S O L A B L E

120 —

CONSTANCY

CONSOLABLE — INCONSOLABLE

CONSOLATION — DISCONSOLATION

Why, when I was your age, Sir, I had been an inconsolable widower for three months...

I Ideal, 235

... at last she was driven to take refuge from a univer­ sal convergence of blame in the dignity of inconsol­ able widowhood.

Food, 159

... restoring ’em to their friends, who I dare say, have had their disconsolation pasted up on every wall in London by this time.

Curiosity, 164

CONSPICUOUS — INCONSPICUOUS

Bing, who had made himself inconspicuous in the half­ dark corner of the tent, watched the general scan the

copy.

Crusaders, 95

It might be better... to spend the first night there a,t some inexpensive inconspicuous hotel...

Tragedy, 497

CONSTANT — INCONSTANT

CONSTANCY — INCONSTANCY

He had already had a misgiving that the inconstant actors in that dazzling vision had been doing the same thing the night before last...

Curiosi ty,

345

To look at anything that is inconstant is charming nowadays.

/ mportance, 145

It is an act of inconstancy.

Egoist, 151

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