Incomprehensive
Incomprehensive is an adjective meaning lacking a comprehensive or thorough quality. It describes a state of being incomplete or insufficiently inclusive, especially when referring to information, coverage, reasoning, or scholarship. The term arises from the prefix in- meaning “not” or “without” combined with the base word comprehensive. Though not frequently used in everyday speech, it is found in legal, academic, and technical writings to emphasize the disadvantages of partial information or analysis.
The root word comprehensive entered English from French comprehensive (comprehensive) in the early 17th century, with
In practice, incomprehensive is often paired with nouns such as "data set," "report," "analysis," or "law," to
The word is rarely confused with incomprehensible, which describes something that is difficult to understand. In
Synonyms include partial, limited, insufficient, and patchy. Antonyms are comprehensive, exhaustive, and all‑encompassing.
The use of incomprehensive is primarily in formal writing. While it carries the same stress and inflection