nonacquirable
English
editEtymology
editFrom non- + acquirable.
Adjective
editnonacquirable (not comparable)
- Not acquirable; unacquirable.
- 2001, Marcel Bax, C. Jan-Wouter Zwart, Reflections on Language and Language Learning, page 249:
- She therefore concludes that 'there will be aspects of the TL [_target language] that will be 'nonacquirable ( 160 ) .
- 2007, John Alexander Williams, Turning to Nature in Germany: Hiking, Nudism, and Conservation, 1900-1940, page 262:
- From this version of nature, in which the cold eradication oof useless variations was a necessary part of the striving for perfection, the Nazis dredged up such "natural laws" as the principle that "every action of the human being rests upon inalienable and nonacquirable hereditary characteristics."
- 2019, Anne Lounsbery, Life Is Elsewhere, page 114:
- "Taste" tends to suggest a nonacquirable, probably inborn, and possibly aristocratic “je-ne-sais-quoi,” recalling the values of salon culture rather than those of an upstart proto-intelligent like Belinsky, for whom the pedagogical mission of criticism was of overriding importance.