invincible

adj
/ɪnˈvɪn.sə.bəl/UK/ɪnˈvɪn.sə.bəl/US

Etymology

From Middle French invincible, from Latin invincibilis (“unconquerable”), from in- (“not”) + vincibilis (“conquerable”), from vincere (“to conquer”).

  1. derived from invincibilis — “unconquerable
  2. derived from invincible

Definitions

  1. Impossible to defeat, destroy, or kill

    Impossible to defeat, destroy, or kill; too powerful to be defeated or overcome.

    • You know our armie is inuincible: As many circumcized Turkes we haue, And warlike bands of Chriſtians renyed, As hath the Ocean or the Terrene ſea Small drops of water, […]
    • Nothing in this world could / Ever bring them down / Yeah, they're invincible / And she's just in the background
    • I'm unstoppable / I'm a Porsche with no brakes / I'm invincible / Yeah, I win every single game
  2. Someone or something that cannot be defeated, destroyed, or killed.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for invincible. 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