1 not clearly determined or established:
We can repeat this argument to construct infinitely many equilibrium paths and, therefore, the original equilibrium is said to be indeterminate.
The duty of a judge to apply applicable rules would thus be indeterminate-it would obtain in some cases and not in others.
A speaker selectively focuses on just one of a large (and possibly indeterminate) number of such factors.
If these mid-century financial villains are all homemade upstarts, they are not only regularly identified with, but increasingly replaced by, more or less indeterminate foreigners.
A steady state in case 2 is unstable or indeterminate.
One supporting argument is that lineation is as indeterminate and ambiguous as other metrical forms.
In a monetary economy, depending on fiscal and monetary policies, dynamic trajectories may have determinate prices, indeterminate prices, or no equilibrium.
Critics might charge that the insertion of a "reasonableness" clause is problematic because it leaves the prescriptions of genetic justice largely indeterminate.