<adj.all> as insubstantial as a dream an insubstantial mirage on the horizon
lacking in nutritive value
<adj.all> the jejune diets of the very poor
Insubstantial \In`sub*stan"tial\, a. Unsubstantial; not real or strong. ``Insubstantial pageant.'' [R.] --Shak.
But at the same time, Scowcroft has notified the White House legal counsel's office that he will seek waivers allowing him to take part in government dealings with some of the companies on the list in which his interest is insubstantial.
But a rental can't be part of a trade or business activity unless it is ancillary and relatively insubstantial.
The Paganini is frothy, insubstantial stuff and Sarah Chang was well ahead of any problems it might have posed.
Lively, peppery, insubstantial but impressively scented.
Then, the stories picked are treated in trivial, insubstantial ways.