13 June 2015
insuperable
[in-soo-per-uh-buh l]
adjective
1. incapable of being passed over, overcome, or surmounted:
an insuperable barrier.
Origin of insuperable
Middle English,Latin
1300-1350; Middle English < Latin insuperābilis. See in-3, superable
Related forms
insuperability, insuperableness, noun
insuperably, adverb
Dictionary.com
Examples from the web for insuperable
Second, they broke down the wall between teen music and adult music, a wall that had been insuperable until then.
– (A Revolution, With Guitars: How The Beatles Changed Everything Michael Tomasky January 27, 2014)
Not necessarily an insuperable or lethal problem, but a problem that must be overcome—and certainly not a plus.
– (Comrade Ryan’s Plan Has 110% Approval! David Frum August 15, 2012)
But he prefers women – and most certainly does not love the baron, for the insuperable reason that he loves nobody except himself.
– (David’s Bookclub: Sodom and Gomorrah David Frum September 28, 2012)
Anagram
beanie slurp
Today’s aphorism
For where God built a church, there the Devil would also build a chapel.
– Martin Luther
On this day
13 June 1381 – The Peasants Revolt (a brief rebellion against poll tax), led by Wat Tyler, culminates in the burning down of the Savoy Palace in London.
13 June 1525 – Martin Luther, a German monk and Catholic priest, marries a nun, Katharina von Bora, which violated the rule of celibacy decreed by the Roman Catholic church for priests and nuns. The couple went on to have six children together.
13 June 1865 – birth of William Butler Yeats (W.B. Yeats), Irish poet, Nobel Prize laureate. One of the foremost literary figures of the 20th century. He served as an Irish senator for two terms. He led the Irish Literary Revival. In 1921 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for ‘inspired poetry, which in a highly artistic form gives expression to the spirit of a whole nation‘. Died 28 January 1939.
13 June 1927 – birth of Slim Dusty AO, MBE, Australian country music singer, song-writer and producer. He was born as David Gordon Kirkpatrick and adopted the name of Slim Dusty at 11 years of age. He released his first record when he was 18. In 1957, he released ‘The Pub With No Beer‘, which became the biggest selling Australian song to that time, and the first Australian single to go gold. He won 36 Golden Guitar Awards at the Tamworth Country Music Festival. In 2000, he recorded his 100th album, ‘Looking Forward, Looking Back‘. He is the only artist in the world to have recorded 100 albums with the same record label (EMI). Died 19 September 2003.
13 June 1944 – Germany launches 10 of its new rockets, known as the V1 (also called a doodlebug or buzz bomb). The V1s were pilot-less, pulse-jet-propelled rockets with a one ton payload with a 500km range. The Germans rained V1s over London. The V1 was an early version of the Cruise Missile.