释义 |
Definition of insuperable in English: insuperableadjective ɪnˈsuːp(ə)rəb(ə)lɪnˈsup(ə)rəb(ə)l (of a difficulty or obstacle) impossible to overcome. (困难,障碍)无法克服的,不可逾越的 insuperable financial problems 无法克服的财政问题。 Example sentencesExamples - It is the strong bond between the two parties that forms an almost insuperable barrier to entry and shuts out potential competitors.
- Self-transcendence is overcoming insuperable obstacles in one's path.
- This is the radical uncertainty that haunts contemporary Marxist theorists, the insuperable difficulty of impossible exchange.
- The flexibility result hints that lack of reform in Europe need not be an insuperable barrier to UK entry.
- On the other hand, to allow the majority to create a rule against the wishes of the minority would lead to insuperable difficulties.
- But you seem not to have had any insuperable difficulty in locating the Barclay companies.
- The Chilean experience shows that this obstacle, though daunting, is not insuperable.
- The English inflicted heavy casualties against seemingly insuperable odds because they used longbows to attack the opposing cavalry.
- We hope our series will help people understand the depth of courage and determination needed to triumph against such insuperable odds.
- Are those steps up to the bank an insuperable obstacle?
- In practice, the political obstacles to metropolitan plans have been virtually insuperable for a generation and are likely to remain so.
- The union had been given a final chance to prevail against what had seemed insuperable odds.
- If that is your proposition, that seems to me to present an insuperable hurdle in your way.
- Care for and control of them cannot be seen as an insuperable barrier to peace.
- The diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property originate, is not less an insuperable obstacle to a uniformity of interests.
- Japanese fighting men did not surrender, even in the face of insuperable odds.
- But the more I think about it, the more it appears that there are no insuperable obstacles to such a development should it ever become democratically necessary.
- Such an approach, however, created insuperable difficulties.
- We stand against insuperable odds, around one thousand to one.
- We should note that this method did not become an insuperable barrier.
Synonyms insurmountable, unconquerable, invincible, unassailable overwhelming, hopeless, impossible
Derivativesnoun ɪnˌsuːp(ə)rəˈbɪlɪtiˌɪnˌsup(ə)rəˈbɪlədi The next logical step is to say that, given the insuperability of the subjective viewpoint, we can describe no independent natural or divine life that human life efficiently serves.
adverb ɪnˈsuːp(ə)rəbliɪnˈsup(ə)rəbli Cladding and glazing this complex shape was also something that would have been almost insuperably difficult before the arrival of the computer-generated special shape.
OriginMiddle English (in the general sense 'invincible'): from Old French, or from Latin insuperabilis, from in- 'not' + superabilis (from superare 'overcome'). Definition of insuperable in US English: insuperableadjectiveɪnˈsup(ə)rəb(ə)linˈso͞op(ə)rəb(ə)l (of a difficulty or obstacle) impossible to overcome. (困难,障碍)无法克服的,不可逾越的 insuperable financial problems 无法克服的财政问题。 Example sentencesExamples - We hope our series will help people understand the depth of courage and determination needed to triumph against such insuperable odds.
- But the more I think about it, the more it appears that there are no insuperable obstacles to such a development should it ever become democratically necessary.
- On the other hand, to allow the majority to create a rule against the wishes of the minority would lead to insuperable difficulties.
- The union had been given a final chance to prevail against what had seemed insuperable odds.
- But you seem not to have had any insuperable difficulty in locating the Barclay companies.
- Japanese fighting men did not surrender, even in the face of insuperable odds.
- In practice, the political obstacles to metropolitan plans have been virtually insuperable for a generation and are likely to remain so.
- Self-transcendence is overcoming insuperable obstacles in one's path.
- It is the strong bond between the two parties that forms an almost insuperable barrier to entry and shuts out potential competitors.
- We stand against insuperable odds, around one thousand to one.
- Care for and control of them cannot be seen as an insuperable barrier to peace.
- The flexibility result hints that lack of reform in Europe need not be an insuperable barrier to UK entry.
- Are those steps up to the bank an insuperable obstacle?
- If that is your proposition, that seems to me to present an insuperable hurdle in your way.
- The English inflicted heavy casualties against seemingly insuperable odds because they used longbows to attack the opposing cavalry.
- We should note that this method did not become an insuperable barrier.
- The Chilean experience shows that this obstacle, though daunting, is not insuperable.
- The diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property originate, is not less an insuperable obstacle to a uniformity of interests.
- Such an approach, however, created insuperable difficulties.
- This is the radical uncertainty that haunts contemporary Marxist theorists, the insuperable difficulty of impossible exchange.
Synonyms insurmountable, unconquerable, invincible, unassailable
OriginMiddle English (in the general sense ‘invincible’): from Old French, or from Latin insuperabilis, from in- ‘not’ + superabilis (from superare ‘overcome’). |