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implacable
[im-plak-uh-buhl, -pley-kuh-]
adjective
not to be appeased, mollified, or pacified; inexorable.
an implacable enemy.
implacable
/ ɪmˈplækəbəl /
adjective
incapable of being placated or pacified; unappeasable
inflexible; intractable
Other Word Forms
- implacably adverb
- implacability noun
- implacableness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of implacable1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Indeed, I found myself feeling a personal bond with the calm and implacable voice guiding our progress even as my spouse spluttered and argued.
Craig Wallace’s Telégin, known as “Waffles” for his pockmarked skin, is an amiable fumbler yet suffused with kindness and possessing an implacable decency.
But, as in “Men,” Kinnear’s appearance of placidity makes his characters’ nefarious tendencies even more chilling; his ability to draw his mouth into a grim implacable line is second to none.
Sen, who also handled both the black-and-white cinematography and the editing, has a terrific eye for shot composition and sets a deliberate pace that feels implacable rather than merely slow.
Some, like a sashaying cover of Jeanette’s “Porque Te Vas,” are impeccably stylish, others like “The Crying Game” are implacably melancholy.
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