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interminable
[in-tur-muh-nuh-buhl]
adjective
incapable of being terminated; unending.
an interminable job.
monotonously or annoyingly protracted or continued; unceasing; incessant.
I can't stand that interminable clatter.
having no limits.
an interminable desert.
interminable
/ ɪˈɜːɪəə /
adjective
endless or seemingly endless because of monotony or tiresome length
Other 51Թ Forms
- interminableness noun
- interminability noun
- interminably adverb
- ˌٱԲˈٲ noun
- ˈٱԲ adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of interminable1
Example Sentences
Although four years feels interminable, Trump is not a permanent fixture, and he will be out of office while Bondi still needs her law license.
After eight interminable days, it struck me: My husband was suffering just as deeply as I was.
Rome-appointed commissioners have had difficulties tackling the vast levels of debt faced by hospitals, meaning Calabrians remain crippled by a serious lack of medical personnel and beds, as well as interminable waiting lists.
His presidency also was buffeted by domestic crises — rampant inflation and high unemployment, as well as interminable lines at gas stations triggered by a decline in the global oil supply exacerbated by Iran’s Islamic Revolution.
“Were the court to condone the practice of allowing defeated parties to create new facts for the purpose of revising judgments, lawsuits would become interminable.”
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