Aún no tenemos significados para "so intangible".
1She seems so real and substantial, and yet so intangible!
2There's nothing so intangible in this world as insurance.
3My loved ones are not far away, they are very near, but, oh, so intangible.
4His thoughts fell back to Stephen Fountain, cursing an influence at once so intangible and so strong.
5The evil was of a deeper, subtler sort; so elusive, so intangible, as to defy clear, definite analysis in words.
6He wove a shield against the attack, but I guess he wasn't used to handling something so intangible as a memory.
7One of the miseries of my present situation is that it is all so intangible, and to the outsider so incomprehensible.
8And, in fact, what objection can be offered to a conception so radically null, so intangible as that of M. Blanc?
9This is no simple task, not least because we struggle with the idea of placing a value on something apparently so intangible.
10I may have only a vague regard for justice, for abstract right is so intangible; but I have a strong and definite sympathy.
11And yet-What gave her pause was so intangible, so chaotic, in her own mind as to form itself into no definite idea.
12I, too, was busy, trying to reason out how he was aware of the existence of so intangible a thing as a shadow.
13The gambler makes his living by his wits, and he who lives by anything so intangible speedily finds the road to cheating and trickery.
14But how are we to cast off the visible tangible protection of an armed policeman, and trust to something so intangible as public opinion?
15There was something in Max's attitude that puzzled her, but it was something so intangible that she could not even vaguely define it to herself.
16Never before had she seemed so remote, so colorless and high-sointangible and unreal.
Esta colocación está formada por:
So intangible a través del tiempo
So intangible por variante geográfica