We have no meanings for "too intangible" in our records yet.
1 They stood quiet for a moment, their thoughts too intangible for speech.
2 It chafed him, but it was too intangible a thing to tear aside.
3 Her marriage still seemed too intangible a matter for serious contemplation.
4 The first answer is too intangible , the second too narrow.
5 After I got away, it was all too delicate, too intangible , to write about.
6 There is a certain secret in the hair-curling process which is too intangible for written description.
7 It was too intangible to even locate.
8 Agatha felt it, though it was too intangible to be taken notice of, either for rebuke or reward.
9 It is too intangible , too fantastic.
10 The attraction that held her was as yet too intangible to be definitely analyzed, but she could not deny its existence.
11 When the emotions became too intangible for intellectual expression I asked my friend the musician to insert paragraphs in a minor key.
12 But Annie did, and it was another source of vague uneasiness and pain, though the causes were too intangible to speak of.
13 She could have gone to her grandfather for advice on most questions, but this was too intangible for her to explain to him.
14 In a time where too many Black women are burying children, the loss of a fetus seemed too intangible to merit real grief.
15 What it is, I don't know, and I'm mighty glad that I don't have to speak of it in my despatches; it's too intangible .
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Too intangible across language varieties