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
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  • 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
  • And when they are piled into a buttery pastry case with creamy egg custard and Parmesan topping, the aromas are almost unbearably delectable. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sun was almost unbearably hot today.
  • The rarity of paragraphs and unbearably long sentences also add to this constraint; the page is an impassable, unending block.
  • The opening scenes present a bounty of puppies so unbearably cute, they'll elicit a chorus of coos from even the stoniest audience.
  • Others are angry but matter-of-fact about a lifestyle that seems unbearably grim to the outsider.
  • Rafael came into the room wearing a dark blue windjammer and jeans and sneakers; handsome as always, unbearably so. MAMBO
  • The sun was almost unbearably hot today.
  • Unbearably smitten, Oscar flees his father's Thanksgiving party to drown his sorrows in a midtown bar.
  • And it may only be mildly entertaining I trust your opinion in these matters completely but may I just say that the idea of peroxide vamps in leopard skin bikinis seems almost unbearably delightful. The Night of the Sorcerers (1973)
  • Arguably the definitive film about submarine warfare, the film forces the audience into unbearably close proximity with the crew of the boat. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is unbearably slow and cumbersome, and it's not connecting students with leases and sublets as well as the old orange card system.
  • When things are going well for them politically, they are unbearably arrogant, shoving it in everyone's faces, ungraciously lording it over all concerned.
  • They have their money in an active fund, are making a higher return than is humanly decent and look unbearably smug. Times, Sunday Times
  • Her tiny attic room had poor ventilation and in summer it became unbearably stuffy.
  • The brightness of the sun smote her eyes; her head throbbed unbearably. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • Summer out there is unbearably hot and humid. The Sun
  • It was unbearably hot in the car.
  • It is Charles's job to appear in front of the cameras, grin and bear it and answer sometimes unbearably inane questions with whatever panache he can muster.
  • And in the tropics these protective suits are unbearably hot and humid. The Sun
  • When I'm chatting with someone and want to refer to Romanes, I call it "Gypsy" for the same reason -- it would be appallingly discourteous to use a name certain to go over their head, and I would find it unbearably pedantic to be saying things like "now, in Romanes, which is what you call 'Gypsy'... Languagehat.com: LANGUAGE GUESSER.
  • As the star got larger and larger and almost unbearably bright, the light started to dim, fading away behind them.
  • It's too hot to wear earplugs, and unbearably uncomfortable if your entire body is covered by the sarong, including your head.
  • Rather it is their spouses and children who suffer terribly if not unbearably.
  • It's almost unbearably tempting to suggest a furtive flick on the nose.
  • It was unbearably hot in the car.
  • And when they are piled into a buttery pastry case with creamy egg custard and Parmesan topping, the aromas are almost unbearably delectable. Times, Sunday Times
  • They danced until it was unbearably hot and her throat burned.
  • Sometimes when the hogán is unbearably smoky a rough chimney-like structure, consisting of a rude cribwork, is placed about this smoke hole. Navaho Houses, pages 469-518 Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1898
  • The pendulum of the grandfather clock sways as the second hand moves seemingly unbearably slow.
  • And nowadays, the marketplace wants dubs and shiny bling bling to spruce up otherwise unbearably ordinary rides.
  • When, according to "Jimbo", the lake dried up, the climate would change and the valley with its dried up lakebed would become unbearably hot and cold and unlivable and almost immediately after Mr. Bentein left for Mazatlan, the lake miraculously refilled and now Jim is experiencing a water crisis in Mazatlan. Water in Chapala
  • These massive objects sometimes weighed several pounds, and with the addition of padding must have been unbearably hot.
  • I had had no water or food all day and my stomach was cramping almost unbearably.
  • Because otherwise social conventions and inequalities would be unbearably stifling and irksome, and terrible things and events would remain festering in our minds, unaired.
  • Her tiny attic room had poor ventilation and in summer it became unbearably stuffy.
  • The later levels of the game are so unbearably evil, that this game really should have been locked in a lead case and buried half a mile underground.
  • The heroine's sense of dislocation, genteel poverty and dreams of redemption are almost unbearably vivid. Times, Sunday Times
  • Arguably the definitive film about submarine warfare, the film forces the audience into unbearably close proximity with the crew of the boat. Times, Sunday Times
  • Also be careful when buying fortified wines and ports as some can be unbearably sweet or acidic.
  • Sometimes life seems unbearably cruel.
  • She then proceeded to powder my face unbearably until I sneezed.
  • It was squalid, dirty, inconvenient and unbearably noisy. Times, Sunday Times
  • This kind of experience can reinforce our sense of insecurity, as well as making the burden of sadness unbearably heavy.
  • As Christmas draws nearer,(sentence dictionary) the shops start to get unbearably crowded.
  • Usually records of this sort are unbearably cutesy or too steeped in ironic smugness to be enjoyable.
  • 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.
  • Cairo during/in August is unbearably hot and crowded.
  • The locked-out crowd had two choices: remain uncomfortably warm in the plaza, or crowd into the box-office area and swelter unbearably.
  • it was unbearably hot in the room
  • A gobbet of warm gelatin landed on his legs, and an unbearably foul smell filtered through the air.
  • When things are going well for them politically, they are unbearably arrogant, shoving it in everyone's faces, ungraciously lording it over all concerned.
  • It was squalid, dirty, inconvenient and unbearably noisy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Friends: believe me when I say that the combination between the two disparate elements - unbearably goofy synth-pop and sub-par commentary on various parties' political shortcomings - is indeed a deadly one.
  • As we step out of the office into an unbearably hot afternoon, he looks up into the sunny sky, and says, straight-faced: ‘Well, I see it's stopped snowing.’

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