How To Use Unsinkable In A Sentence
-
But as you know unsinkable ships have sunk and unbreakable walls have broken, I should know for I was there.
-
He feels much more comfortable with me on this ship; it's unsinkable.
-
About two hours and 40 minutes passed between the time that the unsinkable Titanic struck an iceberg and when it finally slipped below the ocean's waves.
-
The exhibition ran for six weeks and showed how the reputedly unsinkable liner struck an iceberg and went down with the loss of 1,532 lives on April 15, 1912.
-
Ironically, the Titanic was advertised as being unsinkable.
-
Buoyant little balls of fluff that looked unsinkable.
Times, Sunday Times
-
He died, along with 1,516 others, as the ship hailed as unsinkable broke in two and slipped beneath the waves.
Times, Sunday Times
-
This is reminiscent of the utter failure of the invincible Maginot Line or the unsinkable Titanic.
-
For decades Titanic buffs and academics have argued over whether the White Star Line company ever claimed the ship was unsinkable or if the legend of an indestructible ship was a hangover of media speculation and hype from the 1910s.
-
Unfortunately for the U-boat force, as with all other naval officers at that time, the German Naval High Command believed vehemently in the unsinkable battleship.
-
These circular basket boats are like large, unsinkable, cane saucers covered in buffalo-hide or plastic.
-
they thought the Titanic was unsinkable
-
Realising the supposedly unsinkable Titanic was doomed, Andrews insisted that the order to abandon ship be given.
-
What other cause would there be to put people into lifeboats on an unsinkable ship?
-
Every mountain is unclimbable until someone climbs it. So every ship is unsinkable until it sinks.
-
It was billed as an unsinkable ship due to its construction.
-
The great paradox of the Titanic, after all, is that the ship only became unsinkable after it sank.
-
Every mountain is unclimbable until someone climbs it. So every ship is unsinkable until it sinks.
-
It's undoubtedly a brave move, once again telling the story of 'the unsinkable ship' in a four-part drama.
The Sun
-
What other cause would there be to put people into lifeboats on an unsinkable ship?
-
The 46,000-ton luxury liner had been thought unsinkable because of its revolutionary design.
The Sun
-
Every mountain is unclimbable until someone climbs it. So every ship is unsinkable until it sinks.
-
No one thought it would sink - it was unsinkable - but then it was driven into the wrong waters, too far north, and came up against an iceberg.
-
It was only in the aftermath of the disaster that the belief took hold that Titanic had been considered unsinkable, highlighting the stunned and universal surprise at the loss of Britain's most advanced ocean giant.
-
But it is because of hydrogen bonds that ice floats, and the iceberg can sink even the unsinkable ship.
-
A little before midnight on 14 April the Titanic, which was considered unsinkable, collided with an iceberg about 650 km south of Newfoundland.
-
Every mountain is unclimbable until someone climbs it. So every ship is unsinkable until it sinks.
-
And there were a whole bunch of people who said that the Titantic was unsinkable.
-
So how exactly does an unsinkable ship end up sinking?
Times, Sunday Times
-
Built by Harland and Wolff in Belfast the 45,000-ton Titanic was considered the most advanced vessel of her time and thought to be unsinkable.
-
But we are unlikely to learn why disaster struck this supposedly unsinkable submarine. ‘The secrecy regime will be observed in full,’ said a spokesman for the Northern Fleet.
-
These circular basket boats are like large, unsinkable, cane saucers covered in buffalo-hide or plastic.
-
She was hailed as unsinkable.
The Sun
-
Eskimo kaiak or skin boat, made of dressed seal hides stretched around a framework of whale ribs or wood, with an opening in the top only large enough to accommodate the sitting body of one man, is one of the most perfect contrivances in the world for water travel, being light, swift, and practically unsinkable.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
-
A season dedicated to the 'unsinkable' liner.
Times, Sunday Times
-
It does seem a bit inappropriate though considering the unsinkable ship was sunk by an iceberg all those years ago.
-
It does seem a bit inappropriate though considering the unsinkable ship was sunk by an iceberg all those years ago.
-
All I have to say is, the people who claimed that it's unsinkable must be not right in the heads; no ship is unsinkable.
-
An energetic cast, headed by the unsinkable Helen Mirren as deposed Milanese royalty Prospera (here given a change of gender), cavorts through a digitally enhanced version of the Bard's tragicomic tale of exile, shipwreck, old wounds and young love set on a remote island.
The Best of the Fest
-
Truth of her days Black endless rays Shows the skryer Damsel in chains For love the bard reigns ... destroyer Skills surpass strength Towers that quake Song of doom Unsinkable stars bring powers at large the day they mote The shaking of Teir Sonic psalm terrors ... chains are freed Come to me, Champion Your life has been sieged in me Calling from distances Yearning to be set free
WN.com - Articles related to Facebook helps customers connect through technology
-
Since 1912, when the Titanic sank on her inaugural voyage, there have been many theories behind the mystery of how this unsinkable ship ended up on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.
-
The skin boat or kaiak of the Eskimo was a marvel of lightness and buoyancy, being practically unsinkable.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
-
The ship was virtually unsinkable and the aim of the preparation was to facilitate rapid sinking, yet still allow for safe diver access.