uncompletion

English

Etymology

From un- (lack of) + completion.

Noun

uncompletion (uncountable)

  1. Lack or absence of completion
    • 2010, Simon Marginson, ‎Peter Murphy, ‎Michael A. Peters, Global Creation:
      The key move, though, is to open the boundaries of the field as Bourdieu describes it, to tolerate the coexistence of structure and contingency; of borderness on one hand, and porousness and uncompletion on the other.
    • 2012, Tracy Saunders, St. James' Rooster:
      She had felt a distinct sense of uncompletion and frustration but could recall nothing more than this.
    • 2014, Alessandro Aldini, ‎Javier Lopez, ‎Fabio Martinelli, Foundations of Security Analysis and Design VII:
      Finally, the third issue is the uncompletion of testing because, in general, we cannot explore all possibilities.

Synonyms

See also

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