incalculable damage

  • 1incalculable — in‧cal‧cu‧la‧ble [ɪnˈkælkjləbl] adjective formal not possible to calculate: • The social cost of unemployment is incalculable. • Countries are insuring against the incalculable risk of the consequences of climate change. * * * incalculable UK… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 2incalculable — [[t]ɪnkæ̱lkjʊləb(ə)l[/t]] ADJ Something that is incalculable cannot be calculated or estimated because it is so great. He warned that the effects of any war would be incalculable... This has done incalculable damage to his reputation. Syn:… …

    English dictionary

  • 3incalculable — adjective Date: 1795 not capable of being calculated: as a. very great < did incalculable damage > b. not predictable ; uncertain < an incalculable outcome > • incalculability noun • incalculably adverb …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 4incalculable — in|cal|cu|la|ble [ınˈkælkjuləbəl] adj formal too great to be calculated ▪ Her contribution to our work is incalculable. incalculable importance/value/worth etc ▪ treasures of incalculable value incalculable harm/damage/suffering etc ▪ The&#8230; …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 5Foreign object damage — FOD to the compressor blades of a Honeywell LTS101 turboshaft engine on a Bell 222, caused by a small bolt that passed through the protective inlet screen …

    Wikipedia

  • 6Asteroids in fiction — Asteroids and asteroid belts are a staple of science fiction stories.Asteroids play several potential roles in science fiction: as places which human beings might colonize; as resources for extracting minerals; as a hazard encountered by&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Laborem Exercens — was an encyclical written by Pope John Paul II in 1981, on human work. It is part of a larger body of writings known as Catholic social teaching, that trace their origin to Rerum Novarum which was issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891.External links*&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 8Effect of the Siege of Leningrad on the city — Timeline of the Siege of Leningrad 1941 *June 22: Operation Barbarossa begins. *June 29: Evacuation of children and women from Leningrad starts. *June–July: Over 300 thousand civilian refugees from Pskov and Novgorod manage to escape from the&#8230; …

    Wikipedia

  • 9Disasters — ▪ 2009 Introduction Aviation       January 23, Poland. A Spanish built CASA transport plane carrying members of the Polish air force home from a conference on flight safety in Warsaw crashes near the town of Miroslawiec; all 20 aboard are killed …

    Universalium

  • 10Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki — Part of the Pacific War, World War II …

    Wikipedia