We have no meanings for "quite immaterial" in our records yet.
1 The number of coins in the circle itself is quite immaterial .
2 The latter is quite immaterial for him who has been injured.
3 Perhaps he will get it right, perhaps he won't; it is quite immaterial .
4 It is quite immaterial where the guests sit, and they go in separately, not arm-in-arm.
5 Form of notice is quite immaterial , provided it is definite and clear in its purport.
6 Take your choice; it is quite immaterial to me!
7 I must remind you, that to the principle of our argument these things are quite immaterial .
8 I did indeed go back there once again, but under circumstances quite immaterial to my story.
9 It was something quite immaterial to any real issue, but something that overshadowed every consideration in the world.
10 Whether Hott has a sword of his own the saga does not tell, and it is quite immaterial .
11 The effects were doubtless quite immaterial .
12 It is quite immaterial , only it must have a rime in 'oo;' 'oo' is always a sad vowel.
13 Meyer's work was quite immaterial to him; it was badly paid, and he only did it as a stop-gap.
14 It was quite immaterial to Mr. Camp whether he got an answer to his remarks to Hiram, or not.
15 It would have been more sensible to have taken my request otherwise, but it is, after all, quite immaterial .
16 That," said Mr. Soper, "is quite immaterial . "
Other examples for "quite immaterial"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Quite immaterial through the time
Quite immaterial across language varieties