[
UK
/ʌnbˈeəɹəbli/
]
[ US /ənˈbɛɹəbɫi/ ]
[ US /ənˈbɛɹəbɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
to an unbearable degree
it was unbearably hot in the room
How To Use unbearably In A Sentence
- She found it unbearably painful to speak.
- She began to bawl unbearably and leaned into Malachi's chest, clutching his sweatshirt tightly.
- Unfortunately, the wine was almost unbearably sickly sweet, without any tartness or depth, and about as refreshing as a jug of syrup.
- What they say can be both extraordinarily lucid and almost unbearably moving.
- Or people munching apples, rustling crisps or having unbearably boring conversations. The Sun
- She found it unbearably painful to speak.
- It's becoming unbearably frustrating, the way the lot of you fellate each other with asininity while legitimate novelty and talent goes completely unrecognized. This website sucks.
- It sounds unbearably twee; it isn't. Times, Sunday Times
- Don't, however, use Greek - or Turkish-made halloumi which is made from cow's milk only; it's unbearably salty and rubbery in texture, and provides little in the way of flavor. The Traveler's Lunchbox
- Interlaid with unbearably long pauses, this turned out to be three rounds: a talent show, a swimwear round, and a formalwear round with interviews. Sullen Months, Möbius Strips