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thinkable

[ UK /θˈɪŋkəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. capable of being conceived or imagined or considered

How To Use thinkable In A Sentence

  • He said the unsayable and the unthinkable but with a twinkle. Times, Sunday Times
  • That may seem unthinkable now, but it is wise to plan for complications. Times, Sunday Times
  • Losing the prized top rating was unthinkable, he said. Times, Sunday Times
  • Then the unthinkable happened and the boat started to sink.
  • Each of the elements he names demands a communicative, rhetorically performed reciprocity that today's electronic media make almost unthinkable.
  • Most people in the country have been touched by unthinkable tragedy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The fact that rigidity in the monetary unit's purchasing power is unthinkable and unrealizable does not impair the methods of economic calculation.
  • Other families with other children, he says, have suffered unthinkable loss.
  • For a second, I thought he was going to do the unthinkable and just pull off without getting his fare. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • NEWCASTLE captain Michael Owen admits the prospect of Newcastle dropping out of the Barclays Premier League is unthinkable. Undefined
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