indescribable
IPA: ɪndɪskrˈaɪbʌbʌɫ
adjective
- Impossible (or very difficult) to describe.
- Exceeding all description.
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Examples of "indescribable" in Sentences
- I'm tempted to call it "indescribable," except we need to describe it, eh?
- The zipping allows us sensory delights which can only remain indescribable.
- Many sources downplay the toxicity factor and riddle toxins as unknown and indescribable, which is far from the truth.
- Yet there was something superior, Atherton thought, something more tasteful, in short, indescribable, about this female.
- On the occasion of the betrothal she had arrived late, dressed in indescribable odds and ends, with an artificial red flower stuck into her frowzy wig.
- We marched [30 Oct.] to Madrid, or rather its suburbs, where the poor inhabitants were in indescribable distress, seeing that they were again to be abandoned to French clemency and contributions.
- ANDERSON COOPER, CNN ANCHOR: Nancy, you know, they continue to just be -- I don ` t want to use the word indescribable because, you know, frankly, it ` s my job to try to describe it and seems like a cop-out.
- I think there was a certain indescribable reserve of gravity upon them all, but there was not one whose lips did not part in a white line when looking at me, nor whose eyes and ears did not watch me with an interest as benign as it was intent.
- It was with a twitch of this kind, and a certain indescribable twinkle of his somewhat melancholy eye, as he seemed intuitively to form a hasty conception of the oddity of his appearance to a stranger unused to the bush, that he welcomed me to his clearing.
- Historian/music critic Greil Marcus coined the term "yarragh" to refer to the indescribable impact of "certain sounds, certain small moments inside a song which can then suggest whole territories, completed stories, indistinct ceremonies, far outside anything that can be literally traced in the compositions that carry them."
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