Not staying the same throughout; having parts that do not agree with each other; not compatible.
Origin
From in- (not) + consistent, from Latin consistere (to stand together, be composed of), from con- + sistere (to stand). Used in English from the late 17th century.
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🎧 Podcast 2 — Daily Use
Inconsistent in Conversation
Two British speakers · Real everyday dialogue
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🌟 Podcast 3 — Prompt Engineering
Inconsistent — AI Prompts
5 copyable & speakable prompt cards · Google UK English voices
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