0 the state of being unable to express feelings or ideas clearly, or of being expressed in a way that is difficult to understand: --
Some people believe this inarticulacy is intentional.
His inarticulacy is taken for stupidity.
Furtwngler was famous for his exceptional inarticulacy when speaking about music.
The inarticulacy that makes them vulnerable is the precise reason why their vulnerability may not be recognised.
His judgements, however, include such statements as 'the heights of inarticulacy', 'this blather', language studies 'hijacked by the descriptive linguists', and 'dreary gruel' (the output of those linguists).
This freedom of expression offered by the later learned language serves as a counterpoint to accounts that emphasize the inauthenticity and inarticulacy of the second language.
The inarticulacy of the playwright's solipsistic world, even as experienced, was not expressed precisely in theatrical terms.
You would think that his inarticulacy and lack of social graces would exile him from polite society.