beatable

[ UK /bˈiːtəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. susceptible to being defeated
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How To Use beatable In A Sentence

  • However, I think that Hillary is more "beatable" in the general election so (1) weighs in her favor there. Archive 2008-02-01
  • Verdict An unbeatable combination of small size and big illumination, but it is expensive. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm not saying Kilkenny are a spent force by any means but they are beatable as Waterford and Galway both proved in the last couple of weeks.
  • Back then England were steamrollering sides and we were told that they were unbeatable, especially as we were playing them at Twickenham.
  • It became an unbeatable combination. Times, Sunday Times
  • If that's not enough for the more demanding customer, the stunning and perhaps unbeatable view of Sofia makes it well worth a visit.
  • These resorts, like Magaluf and Arenal, remain unbeatable in terms of price.
  • A pre-election survey that could result in budget surplus refund cheques creates "brilliant" political optics that could be unbeatable.
  • That's an unbeatable Aussie combination of hilarious bad and good taste. Times, Sunday Times
  • Three of them (fans will know which) are unbeatable classics in the field.
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