indomitable

adj
/ɪnˈdɒmɪtəbl̩/UK/ɪnˈdɑmɪtəbl̩/US

Etymology

From Late Latin indomitābilis, from in- (“not”) + domitō, frequentative of domō (“to tame”). By surface analysis, in- + domitable.

  1. derived from indomitābilis

Definitions

  1. Incapable of being subdued, overcome, or vanquished.

    • Personal courage and an indomitable self-confidence were the chief, indeed the only, qualities which sprang to light in General Feversham.
    • But he was a youth of indomitable spirit, strong and agile as a wild cat.
    • Nobody came on to the movie camera—wrapped it in a bear hug and wrestled it to submission—like Betty Hutton. They called this 40s singer-actress "the Blitzkrieg blond" . . . . [S]he was indomitable, unstoppable.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for indomitable. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA