English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

non sequitur +‎ -ous

Adjective edit

nonsequitous (comparative more nonsequitous, superlative most nonsequitous)

  1. (rare) Having the form of a non sequitur; not logically following from what came before.
    • 2022 January 27, Catherine Richardson, Arden of Faversham, Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN:
      Given their stated hurry in 4, Franklin's question seems oddly nonsequitous. Like his story in Sc. 9, we might see the stand-alone, bawdy comic routine to which this gives rise as moving the travellers some way along the route.
    • 2016 February 24, George Ulrich, The Professional Identity of the Human Rights Field Officer, Routledge, →ISBN:
      53 The decision considered here does not, in its analysis, provide a detailed argument but rather sets out a number of seemingly nonsequitous 'considerations'.
    • 2013 June 6, Jasper Fforde, The Thursday Next Collection 1-3: The Eyre Affair, Lost in a Good Book, The Well of Lost Plots, Hachette UK, →ISBN:
      Some was good, some was bad and some was so nonsensically nonsequitous that it confuses me even now to think about it. And yet, during all that time, I never learned his age, where he came from or where he went when he vanished.