[
US
/ˌənɪˈmædʒɪnəbəɫ/
]
[ UK /ˌʌnɪmˈædʒɪnəbəl/ ]
[ UK /ˌʌnɪmˈædʒɪnəbəl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- totally unlikely
How To Use unimaginable In A Sentence
- A very austere life is truly unimaginable to people. Times, Sunday Times
- Some kind of unimaginable chemical reaction would take the natural sweat produced by us all and turn it into an emitter of light.
- It all sounds rather blissful in a contented, domestic way that would have seemed unimaginable some years ago.
- His almost unimaginable guilt from two consecutive suicides, too, is largely unplumbed, though probably not unfelt.
- Such speed of travel was unimaginable before the railway age.
- One friend, Rajen Shah, called Anni a "princess", adding: "Having been at your wedding, what has happened is unimaginable and still can't believe you are not present amongst us. South Africa murder: police call for help to catch 'scoundrels'
- Most of us, however, take life for granted. We know that one day we must die, but usually we picture that day as far in the future. When we are in buoyant health, death is all but unimaginable. We seldom think of it. The days stretch out in an endless vista. So we go about our petty tasks, hardly aware of our listless attitude toward life.
- What's more, do we have a sufficient number of critical solid-state devices safely stored away so that they can be used to bootstrap the production of new electronics should the unimaginable happen?
- He had stared death in the face, endured unimaginable hardship. KANDAHAR COCKNEY: A Tale of Two Worlds
- It's unimaginable what could happen if optimism were reinterpreted as artifice and the pitchmen ended up being punished.