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irresoluble
[ ir-i-zol-yuh-buhl, ih-rez-uhl- ]
adjective
- incapable of being solved or clarified.
- Archaic.
- incapable of being resolved into component parts; insoluble.
- incapable of being relieved.
irresoluble
/ ɪˈrɛzəljʊbəl /
Derived Forms
- irˌresoluˈbility, noun
- irˈresolubly, adverb
Other Words From
- irre·solu·bili·ty noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of irresoluble1
Example Sentences
Considering the bitter partisanship and irresoluble polarization gripping the country—and by extension our evermore deeply divided Supreme Court—I try to identify the case that seems most likely to lead to a unanimous decision.
Around the same time in the early 1990s, Samuel Huntington came out with his “Clash of Civilizations” thesis, a direct riposte to Fukuyama, a template for a re-energized worldwide conflict of irresoluble identities that has only grown in intensity with each passing year.
Equally obvious, the KSA exhibits contradictions that are irresoluble and goals that are unreachable.
Last year her play “I’ll Never Love Again,” at the Bushwick Starr, was praised by The New York Times critic Ben Brantley, who called Barron an “exciting young playwright” and said she “has the rare gift of being both oblique and perfectly clear — or as clear as one can be about the irresoluble conflicts of life.”
Last year her play “I’ll Never Love Again,” at the Bushwick Starr, was praised by The New York Times critic Ben Brantley, who called Ms. Barron an “exciting young playwright” and said she “has the rare gift of being both oblique and perfectly clear — or as clear as one can be about the irresoluble conflicts of life.”
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