0 much more than usual or expected:
Margot has always spent an inordinate amount of time on her appearance.
1 unreasonably or unusually large in size or degree
But any such advantages would be drastically offset by the inordinate repetition and huge length that such a method of presentation would demand.
One reason for the lack of progress has been the inordinate focus upon replacement alternatives.
We thus argue that although ganglion cells may encode 90% of the information independently, the other 10% may have inordinate importance.
Their words and deeds, which he judges trivial, cannot shoulder the inordinate musical weight placed upon them.
But even when it was permissible, love should not be inordinate.
The new hybrid paradigm achieved inordinate impact and public recognition as it swept over the field.
Adolescents spend an inordinate amount of time with friends.
This is an inordinate amount of money for a soft-covered publication of this size lacking colour illustrations, and it will undoubtedly affect its distribution.