Advertisement
Advertisement
invulnerable
[ in-vuhl-ner-uh-buhl ]
adjective
- incapable of being wounded, hurt, or damaged.
- proof against or immune to attack:
A strong navy made Great Britain invulnerable.
- not open to denial or disproof:
an invulnerable argument.
invulnerable
/ ɪnˈvʌlnərəbəl; -ˈvʌlnrəbəl /
adjective
- incapable of being wounded, hurt, damaged, etc, either physically or emotionally
- incapable of being damaged or captured
an invulnerable fortress
Derived Forms
- ˈܱԱ, adverb
- ˌܱԱˈٲ, noun
Other Word Forms
- ·ܱn··i·ٲ ·ܱn···Ա noun
- ·ܱn·· adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of invulnerable1
Example Sentences
From the outside, Didion seemed to be to be inscrutable, glamorous, insanely gifted and invulnerable.
No sooner has this block of exposition concluded than a cyberattack cripples every system in the U.S.A., including all the ones that had been thought invulnerable.
Progressives tend to split the world into two camps, the vulnerable oppressed and their invulnerable oppressors, which are most determined by your social groups.
And, given their wobbly form, England are certainly not invulnerable to an upset.
Silver lining: King Charles' portrait is invulnerable to Just Stop Oil attacks!
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse