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"something inconsequential" is correct and usable in written English.
It is an adjective that is used to describe something that is not important, trivial, or insignificant. For example, "It was just something inconsequential that I said in passing."
Exact(10)
Hence it's annoyingly common to spend hours debating something inconsequential, while the point of the assignment isn't dealt with.
I don't think of fashion as being something inconsequential or ephemeral, I think of it as being critically important.Q.Of course I have to ask you about the judging last season on "Project Runway".
"Maybe the average reader is not facing the daily challenges of a mom whose child is dying of cancer, for example, but she probably had an argument with her teenager that morning about something inconsequential that left her feeling frustrated and certain there's no middle ground between them," she told me.
So I need something small, something inconsequential.
So, I was sitting around worrying about something inconsequential the other day, as I'm wont to do.
Pletka worries that by not doing something inconsequential in Syria, we will fail to impress Iran with our toughness.
Similar(49)
Someone will have just had a huge void ripped out of them and then someone else will come out with something utterly inconsequential.
Korey Stringer's death is particularly sad and condemnable, given that he gave his life for, of all things, for something as inconsequential as professional sports.
But a fellow of the American Institute of Architects, who gets up at 3 20 every morning and has left sick children at home, is not going to discuss something as inconsequential as clothing.
At stake is nothing less than the roof over the buyer's head, but the repercussions can be primal when, just before the culmination of a deal worth hundreds of thousands or, in many instances, millions of dollars, weeks of negotiations unravel when the buyer and seller suddenly squabble over who gets custody of something as inconsequential as a $150 ceiling fan.
The recent case of a skip falling through a Chelsea street and becoming embedded following basement excavations in one property would be a more understandable reason for residents' fury but we can become just as distressed over something as inconsequential as a neighbour painting their fence an unpleasant shade.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com