English to Gujarati Dictionary incalculable

incalculable

અગણિત
definition
adjective
an archive of incalculable value
too great to be calculated or estimated.
the cost is incalculable but colossal
not able to be calculated or estimated.
translation of 'incalculable'
અસંખ્યા,
અકલ્પ્ય,
અત્યધિક,
અગણિત,
બેશુમાર
example
London is facing a transport catastrophe, costing business hundreds of millions of pounds a year and individuals 'incalculable' stress, as well as damaging tourism.
The toll due to unnatural deaths has been put at 6000; psychological trauma and morbidity has resulted in 'incalculable' damage to the ‘collective mind’ of the community.
In this respect these analysis briefs are of 'incalculable' value.
There must be an 'incalculable' number of women of my generation, however, who have no idea what our place is anymore.
Nonetheless, for these couples, the symbolic value of a state recognizing their relationship will be 'incalculable' .
His unspeakably violent Cultural Revolution led to the destruction of historic buildings as well as 'incalculable' numbers of books and artefacts.
Such an escalation of the conflict could have 'incalculable' consequences.
Their loss truly is 'incalculable' , but they have been helped enormously in their time of grief by the support of their legion of friends.
In short it is something indefinable, 'incalculable' , not something that can easily be analysed.
In the twenty-first century, our Fable for Tomorrow is not some disaster we are trying to avert but a vague, 'incalculable' , and potentially serious threat to our children's health.
Of 'incalculable' value, this collection consists of works and paintings that Picasso gave to his family members and the majority of the exhibits in the collection have not been seen in public before.
Since syphilis arrived in Europe with Columbus, the ‘first fruit’ of the New World, as Voltaire called it, has killed millions and caused 'incalculable' misery to many more.
The discussion presented in this chapter suggests that an understanding of the political economy within which research is structured is of 'incalculable' value to understanding how knowledge is constructed.
The purchaser has accepted the risk of any deviation attributable to factors which were unforeseeable, unknown or 'incalculable' at the time of the forecast.
The only possible threats that can emerge are anonymous forces that are absolutely unforeseeable and 'incalculable' .
I feel strongly that the visual arts are of vast and 'incalculable' importance.
Its value was just £3 but for Mr and Mrs Harrison its sentimental value was 'incalculable' .
His contributions to the game of golf over all - and to lowering the scores of untold millions of golfers in particular - are 'incalculable' .
Financial repercussions can he astronomical, legal entanglements limitless, and the effect on business partners 'incalculable' .
The buildup has continued, and any misreading of signal - it could be a flash point that could set this thing off - and the consequences are really, they're 'incalculable' .
Hence, it means that principally there are no mysterious 'incalculable' forces that come into play, but rather that one can, in principle, master all things by calculation.
The cost in property loss and damage runs into billions, but the cost in human life is 'incalculable' .
It had been an excellent year and, as history would prove, of 'incalculable' value to science.
In The People's Forests, Marshall proclaimed that public ownership was ‘the only basis on which we can hope to protect the 'incalculable' values of the forests’.
The martial spirit cultivated through years of aikido training can be an asset of 'incalculable' value at such times.
The value of his services and sage advice as a director over the last 15 years is 'incalculable' .
Animal research has been an integral part of the development of modern medicine, has saved an 'incalculable' number of lives, and prevents tremendous human suffering.
‘The refugee is a scandal for philosophy, and specifically for epistemology,’ explains Dillon, ‘in that the refugee recalls the radical instability of meaning and the 'incalculability' of the human.’
The seeming 'incalculability' of millions of stolen lives and billions of unpaid hours of labor must not preclude justice from achieving fruition.
Is there an argument for saying that, in view of the almost utter 'incalculability' of where we are going to be in 12 years’ time, that a 10-year charter might be too long, or, on the other hand, because of the incalculability, a 10-year charter might be too short?
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