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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
immaterial
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The difference in our ages was immaterial.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ It is immaterial that his promise is far more valuable than the price he has asked for it.
▪ Of course you could also be looking for work at home, where the ability to travel to and fro is immaterial.
▪ Persons, for Descartes, are mental or immaterial thinking substances.
▪ The content of the mathematics qualification to them is immaterial.
▪ The general opinion was that comets were immaterial, spiritual portents sent by the Creator as warnings about impending momentous events.
▪ The nature of the seller's possession is immaterial.
▪ This may make any savings you anticipate by remortgaging immaterial in the long run.
▪ Whether one agrees or disagrees with this contention is immaterial.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Immaterial

Immaterial \Im`ma*te"ri*al\ ([i^]m`m[.a]*t[=e]"r[i^]*al), a.

  1. Not consisting of matter; incorporeal; spiritual; disembodied.

    Angels are spirits immaterial and intellectual.
    --Hooker.

  2. Of no substantial consequence; without weight or significance; unimportant; as, it is wholly immaterial whether he does so or not.

    Syn: Unimportant; inconsequential; insignificant; inconsiderable; trifling.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
immaterial

late 14c., "spiritual, incorporeal," from Medieval Latin immaterialis "not consisting of matter, spiritual," from assimilated form of in- "not, opposite of" (see in- (1)) + Late Latin materialis (see material). Secondary sense of "unimportant" is first recorded 1690s from material in its 16c. sense of "important." Related: Immaterially.\n

Wiktionary
immaterial

a. 1 Having no matter or substance. 2 (context law accounting) So insubstantial as to be irrelevant.

WordNet
immaterial
  1. adj. of no importance or relevance especially to a law case; "an objection that is immaterial after the fact" [ant: material]

  2. without material form or substance; "an incorporeal spirit" [syn: incorporeal] [ant: corporeal]

  3. not consisting of matter; "immaterial apparitions"; "ghosts and other immaterial entities" [syn: nonmaterial] [ant: material]

  4. not pertinent to the matter under consideration; "an issue extraneous to the debate"; "the price was immaterial"; "mentioned several impertinent facts before finally coming to the point" [syn: extraneous, impertinent, orthogonal]

  5. (often followed by `to') lacking importance; not mattering one way or the other; "whether you choose to do it or not is a matter that is quite immaterial (or indifferent)"; "what others think is altogether indifferent to him" [syn: indifferent]

Wikipedia
Immaterial

Immaterial may refer to:

  • The opposite of matter, material, materialism, or materialistic
  • Maya (illusion), a concept in all Indian religions, that all matter is a grand illusion
  • Incorporeality
  • Immaterialism, or subjective idealism
  • Immaterial (collection), a 2002 short story collection by Robert Hood
Immaterial (collection)

Immaterial is a collection of horror stories by Australian horror writer Robert Hood. Immaterial collects fifteen tales featuring ghosts and grue in plenty, aptly demonstrating his range of concerns and effects.

Usage examples of "immaterial".

But this discussion is immaterial, since these supreme examples of literary excellence exist in all kinds of composition,--poetry, fable, romance, ethical teaching, prophecy, interpretation, history, humor, satire, devotional flight into the spiritual and supernatural, everything in which the human mind has exercised itself,--from the days of the Egyptian moralist and the Old Testament annalist and poet down to our scientific age.

On the other hand, where a State Supreme Court reversed a trial court and entered a final judgment for the defendant, a plaintiff who had never had an opportunity to introduce evidence in rebuttal to certain testimony which the trial court deemed immaterial but which the appellate court considered material, was held to have been deprived of his rights without due process of law.

From the beginning until now, those who have undertaken to solve the great mystery of the creation of a material universe by an Immaterial Deity, have interposed between the two, and between God and man, divers manifestations of, or emanations from, or personified attributes or agents of, the Great Supreme God, who is coexistent with Time and coextensive with Space.

It seemed the demon could not dematerialize very effectively in a world where everything was already immaterial.

The professors of physical science, thoroughly familiarized with things which combine and dissolve, often come to fancy that everything is phenomenal and evanescent, that there is no immaterial substance, that spirit is not entity but process, that thought and feeling and will are mere transient functions of transient matter.

I believe in the existence of an immaterial God, the Author and Master of all beings and all things, and I feel that I never had any doubt of His existence, from the fact that I have always relied upon His providence, prayed to Him in my distress, and that He has always granted my prayers.

The immediately social dimension of the exploitation of living immaterial labor immerses labor in all the relational elements that define the social but also at the same time activate the critical elements that develop the potential of insubordination and revolt through the entire set of laboring practices.

We should note that one consequence of the informatization of production and the emergence of immaterial labor has been a real homogenization of laboring processes.

Anyone not of the strength to lay hold of the first soul, that possessing pure intellection, must grasp that which has to do with our ordinary thinking and thence ascend: if even this prove too hard, let him turn to account the sensitive phase which carries the ideal forms of the less fine degree, that phase which, too, with its powers, is immaterial and lies just within the realm of Ideal-principles.

I knew that if Linda testified truthfully about those two nights of murder, it would be immaterial whether she had been promiscuous, taken dope, stolen.

The action of these vortices is proved to be of variable force, whether arising from atmospheric conditions, or due to an increased activity of the ethereal medium throughout the whole system, is at present immaterial.

The light of our world can be allocated because it springs from a corporeal mass of known position, but conceive an immaterial entity, independent of body as being of earlier nature than all body, a nature firmly self-based or, better, without need of base: such a principle, incorporeal, autonomous, having no source for its rising, coming from no place, attached to no material mass, this cannot be allotted part here and part there: that would be to give it both a previous position and a present attachment.

The biologists of this school say that biological form is created by immaterial morphic fields, fields of force that create forms.

Eastern countries is used as a means of criminal punishment, the survival of the persecuted individual being immaterial to the torturers, as he would be branded for life and ostracized if he recovered.

The remainder, the surrounding curvature, which in some ethereous, immaterial way refused to be rationalized by means of the calculable bounding lines, that, Lawyer Paravant said, with quivering jaw, was pi.