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  1. Dictionary
    incorporeal
    /ˌɪnkɔːˈpɔːrɪəl/

    adjective

    • 1. not composed of matter; having no material existence: "a supreme but incorporeal being called God"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. adjective. formal uk / ˌɪn.kɔːˈpɔː.ri.əl / us / ˌɪn.kɔːrˈpɔːr.i.əl / Add to word list. not having a physical body but a spiritual form: In the film, the house was visited by a strange incorporeal being. Synonym. immaterial. Opposites. corporeal formal. material. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Souls, spirits & ghosts. apparition.

  3. The meaning of INCORPOREAL is not corporeal : having no material body or form. How to use incorporeal in a sentence.

  4. adjective. formal us / ˌɪn.kɔːrˈpɔːr.i.əl / uk / ˌɪn.kɔːˈpɔː.ri.əl / Add to word list. not having a physical body but a spiritual form: In the movie, the house was visited by a strange incorporeal being. Synonym. immaterial. Opposites. corporeal formal. material. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Souls, spirits & ghosts. apparition.

  5. adjective. without material form, body, or substance. spiritual or metaphysical. law having no material existence but existing by reason of its annexation of something material, such as an easement, touchline, copyright, etc. an incorporeal hereditament.

  6. Something that has no material form or physical substance can be described as incorporeal. If you believe in spirits or ghosts that can't be touched or seen but only felt, then you believe in the incorporeal.

  7. Definition of incorporeal adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. adj. 1. without material form, body, or substance. 2. (Ecclesiastical Terms) spiritual or metaphysical. 3. (Law) law having no material existence but existing by reason of its annexation of something material, such as an easement, touchline, copyright, etc: an incorporeal hereditament. ˌincorˈporeally adv. incorporeity, ˌincorporeˈality n.

  9. adjective. 1. without material form, body, or substance. 2. spiritual or metaphysical. 3. law. having no material existence but existing by reason of its annexation of something material, such as an easement, touchline, copyright, etc. an incorporeal hereditament. Collins English Dictionary.

  10. OED's earliest evidence for incorporeal is from 1532, in the writing of Thomas More, lord chancellor, humanist, and martyr. incorporeal is a borrowing from Latin, combined with an English element. Etymons: Latin incorporeus, ‑al suffix1. See etymology.

  11. adjective. formal uk / ˌɪn.kɔːˈpɔː.ri.əl / us / ˌɪn.kɔːrˈpɔːr.i.əl / not having a physical body but a spiritual form: In the film, the house was visited by a strange incorporeal being. Sinónimo. immaterial. Antónimos. corporeal formal. material. SMART Vocabulary: palabras y expresiones relacionadas. Souls, spirits & ghosts. apparition. astral plane