[
UK
/ʌnˈʌtəɹəbli/
]
ADVERB
-
to an inexpressible degree
she was looking very young tonight, and, as usual, indescribably beautiful, in a simple strapless dress of a green and white silky cotton
How To Use unutterably In A Sentence
- _ -- It was, no doubt, by way of brightening an unutterably gloomy week that Mr. L'ESTRANGE MALONE, who has not hitherto been known as a humourist, invited the Government to intercede at Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 159, October 27, 1920
- The sick man lay unutterably weak and spent, kept alive by morphia and by drinks, which he sipped slowly.
- She came home exhausted and unutterably sad.
- I suddenly felt unutterably depressed.
- And what is the essence of that strange and bitter miracle of life which we feel so poignantly, so unutterably, with such a bitter pain and joy, when we are young?
- This you do with much the same air that you would walk into the 16)dock at 17)Bow Street, and then, feeling unutterably miserable, you stand solemnly staring at the child.
- Fans of the British incarnation will probably agree that this clip is at once familiar and also almost unutterably alien. Video Clip From The US Remake of Spaced | /Film
- Now, when I arrived in unutterably chic Aix-en-Provence, I was a totally unaccomplished drinker.