0 impossible to touch, to describe exactly, or to give an exact value: --
1 something that exists but that cannot be touched, exactly described, or given an exact value: --
2 influencing you but not able to be seen or physically felt: --
3 used about a feeling or quality that does not exist in a physical way, or that is difficult to describe: --
4 used about something that has value for a business, although it does not exist in a physical way: --
5 something that does not exist in a physical way, or that is difficult to describe: --
The list of requirements for the job includes intangibles such as self-reliance, persuasiveness, etc.
The foregoing are not fuzzy intangibles but part of the stock of social and human capital that differentiate life's chances.
British forces responded to political intangibles : estimates of hostile intentions and hints gleaned from intelligence reports.
This brings together both the tangible and intangible qualities that one finds in successful built environments.
It is a subject of profound critical importance that is often the most difficult and intangible to account for and theorize.
In both, the aim has been to emphasise the important architectural objective of embodying the intangible in the tangible.
Such afforested area will not be able to substitute completely the natural forest, in terms of all the tangible and intangible resources.
Costs are categorized as direct, indirect, and intangible.
Within the intangible hand framework, both sanctions and rewards are sensitive to the context in which the behavior is taking place.