c.1841, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks, published 1960, page 18:
H. is a person of extraordinary health & vigor, of unerring perception, & equal expression; and yet he is impracticable, and does not flow through his pen or (in any of our legitimate aqueducts) through his tongue.
派生語
impracticability
impracticableness
impracticably
名詞
impracticable (pluralimpracticables)
(obsolete) an unmanageable person
1829, Henry Barkley Henderson, The Bengalee, or Sketches of Society and Manners in the East, page 13:
They were not allowed, of course, to join us in the sitting room, partly that their practice might not be disturbed, but principally, that I was looked upon as an utter impracticable.
1867, James Parton, Famous Americans of Recent Times, page 83:
The strict constructionists had dwindled to a few impracticables, headed by John Randolph.
1870, Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Clubs”, in Society and Solitude. Twelve Chapters, Boston, Mass.: Fields, Osgood, & Co., →OCLC, page 208: