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capable of being transferred
The opposite of the word capable is incapable.
The prefix for "capable" is "in-" as in "incapable" which means not capable or lacking the ability to do something.
The prefix is -in, as in "incapable."
Well, honey, the prefix for "capable" is "in-". So if you add "in-" to "capable," you get "incapable." Just like adding a little salt to a bland dish, it changes the whole flavor of the word.
There are several for each. Incapable is probably the most common form of capable with a prefix, but quasicapable and overcapable are also valid. Illegal and paralegal are the most common forms of legal with a prefix, but there are many others: prelegal, postlegal, pseudolegal, quasilegal, extralegal, medicolegal, and even nonlegal.
I mean iphone
in- is the prefix of incapable. Uncapable is not an actual word and it can be mistaken for incapable.
not. for example "incapable: not capable." "inaccuracy: not accurate".
The root word of incapable is "capable," which means having the ability, competence, or capacity to do something. The prefix "in-" added to "capable" changes the meaning to indicate not having the ability or capacity to do something.
Not alienable; not transferable to another or capable of being repudiated: unalienable rights
The antonyms for inept (incapable) could be adept, deft, skilled, capable, or competent.