All 11 Uses of
incidental
in
The Bourne Identity
- "Don't make it what it wasn't" You are incidental, Doctor.†
Chpt 9 *incidental = something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- It was your idea, incidentally.†
Chpt 9incidentally = of something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- You're quite right, incidentally.†
Chpt 12
- It concerns you, incidentally.†
Chpt 12
- It's a painful exercise in incidental recollection.†
Chpt 13incidental = something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- Incidentally, that's a beaut; it's very sinister, very ominous.†
Chpt 16incidentally = of something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
- After panicked checks were made by German agents all over England-and, incidentally, controlled and monitored by MI Five-the High Command in Berlin bought the story and shifted a large part of their defenses.†
Chpt 19
- The names I submitted were those of anyone-no matter how remote-who might have learned the address of Treadstone, including, incidentally, all of us.†
Chpt 22
- Incidentally, we don't trust the bookkeeper.†
Chpt 27
- Incidentally, Washburn's passport wasn't even U.S. It was British.†
Chpt 34
- Incidentally, she got in several hours ago.†
Chpt 34
Definition:
something that comes with something else, but is less important than it
sometimes in a specialized sense, including:
- incidental expenses or when in context, just incidentals -- minor expenses not budgeted or not specified
- incidental music -- music in a play, television program, radio program, video game or some other form not primarily musical. (The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as the film score or soundtrack.)