You searched for: “more inchoate
inchoate (in KOH it) (adjective), more inchoate, most inchoate
1. Pertaining to something just beginning to develop: Jackie had this inchoate idea of going to France as an exchange student, and when she got more information regarding this and told her parents about her idea, they thought it would be possible!
2. Regarding something which is only partly or imperfectly formed or developed; partly in existence: Sally had to write a term paper and she had an inchoate outline, which she showed to her teacher first, before beginning to think about it seriously and expanding on it.
3. Concerning something which lacks structure, order, or organization: During the writing process of an inchoate character in a novel, the narrative flounders, or breaks down.
4. Etymology: from Latin inchoatus, inchoare, alteration of incohare, "to begin"; originally "to hitch up".

Inchoate is believed to have been borrowed directly from Late Latin inchoationem, nominative inchoatio, from Latin inchoare, and incorrectly altered from incohare, "to begin, to start out".

It originally referred to "hitch up" (a wagon or plough); from in-, "on" + cohum, "strap by which a shaft or plough was fastened to the oxen's yoke".

—Based on information from The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology;
Robert K. Barnhart, Editor; The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988, page 518.
A reference to something that is existing in an early stage of development.
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Relating to the beginning of a process.
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Descriptive of something that is imperfectly developed and incomplete.
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