How to Use unconquerable in a Sentence

unconquerable

adjective
  • And the soul was unconquerable, but the body succumbed.
    Christine M. Flowers, Philly.com, 5 May 2017
  • The Change is an unconquerable force of nature, like death.
    Erin Blakemore, Longreads, 28 May 2017
  • Fifty years ago, his father, Ian, was the first to climb a seemingly unconquerable route on the Eiger’s North Face.
    Mike MacEacheran, Travel, 5 Dec. 2020
  • Omar lives again, thanks to the unconquerable power of his words, now borne aloft by the music of history.
    Charles McNultytheater Critic, Los Angeles Times, 23 Oct. 2022
  • Or the unconquerable African king known as Black Panther.
    Clarkisha Kent, The Root, 30 Jan. 2018
  • Pulling it all together for the country to witness was the unconquerable David Stern.
    Tim Reynolds, ajc, 17 Jan. 2022
  • But a win over what’s been an unconquerable foe would go a long way toward exercising those demons.
    C.j. Doon, baltimoresun.com, 4 Dec. 2021
  • But they get drowned out by his unconquerable determination to make it to the major leagues.
    NBC News, 30 Oct. 2021
  • The talk came around again and again to the almost unconquerable cunning and devilishness of rats, and to their love of attacking their attackers.
    Longreads, 22 May 2017
  • And yet, something about his personality, the character that gave him such a cool head and an unconquerable will, remains just out of reach.
    Gene Seymour, USA TODAY, 27 June 2017
  • Even as trivia night in the Burren’s back room concluded and the hour crept toward midnight, an unconquerable Irish melody drifted out of the pub and onto the otherwise sleepy Elm Street.
    BostonGlobe.com, 21 Sep. 2019
  • The movable feast and unconquerable best features three-course lunches and brunches for $23, and multi-course dinners for $39 (not including tax, tips or drinks).
    Michael Mayo, sun-sentinel.com, 1 Aug. 2019
  • Our great nation has been defined by our ability to conquer the unconquerable.
    Karina Bland, azcentral, 5 June 2018
  • The tone for proceedings was set early on, with the visitors displaying their strength and their unconquerable passing game on display from the whistle.
    SI.com, 10 Mar. 2018
  • Out there, the ownership of land seemed like a myth used to tame an unconquerable planet with its imposing mountains, endless forests, and hypnotic deserts.
    Raffi Joe Wartanian, Outside Online, 8 Oct. 2020
  • As an elite Marine Raider, Captain Navas was a protector and fighter with an unconquerable spirit.
    New York Times, 13 Mar. 2020
  • And there’s an unconquerable issue with batteries that doesn’t really apply to cars: Adding more batteries for more range means more weight.
    Alexander George, Popular Mechanics, 12 Oct. 2018
  • The album’s second half flips toward optimism and catharsis — a white-knuckle grip on the belief in love and humanity to conquer the unconquerable.
    Bobby Olivier, SPIN, 4 May 2022
  • But the unconquerable desire on the part of the elite political media to put her name next to anything that appears remotely scandalous is not going to fare well when the history of this time is written.
    Charles P. Pierce, Esquire, 15 Aug. 2017
  • The grasshopper sparrow, a tiny Florida prairie bird perched on the verge of extinction for the last decade, may have encountered a final, unconquerable foe: an invasive new disease quickly killing off its young.
    Jenny Staletovich, miamiherald, 17 Jan. 2018
  • For all that machines can accomplish, creativity has often been held out as the unconquerable boundary of the human-machine divide.
    Dan Rockmore, Slate Magazine, 11 July 2017
  • This season is about honoring those who believed in an impossible dream, and then to make that dream happen turned UAB’s greatest weakness into an unconquerable strength.
    Joseph Goodman | Jgoodman@al.com, al, 23 Oct. 2020
  • Her persistent themes have revolved around nature as a muse, a predator, a living being, an eternal, unconquerable riddle.
    Greg Kot, chicagotribune.com, 1 June 2018
  • According to the study, the cap alludes to Hercules, a mythological Greek hero who defeated the Nemean lion and other seemingly unconquerable beasts.
    Meilan Solly, Smithsonian, 1 Oct. 2019
  • Each presented himself as indomitable, even unconquerable, when held aloft by popular opinion in his nation.
    Michael Brendan Dougherty, National Review, 20 Aug. 2020
  • Problems that seemed unconquerable a few years ago are being solved, at times with startling gains — think instant language translation capabilities, self-driving cars, and human-like robots.
    Carol McCall, STAT, 12 Aug. 2021
  • Some dreamers will run smack dab into an unconquerable reality.
    Tom Krasovic, San Diego Union-Tribune, 22 Feb. 2022
  • The water roiled, the texture of mashed potatoes, hostile, unconquerable, bucking my seventeen-foot canoe and shooting up frequent, unpredictable spires of water where crisscrossing waves converged.
    James Lynch, Popular Mechanics, 16 Mar. 2018
  • Invincibles no more 155 days later, the unconquerable empire has fallen.
    Juan Pimiento, chicagotribune.com, 14 Jan. 2018
  • Isolated and uncommunicative, Lucas grows feebler, losing stamina and praying to God to deliver him from the unconquerable place.
    David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 27 May 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unconquerable.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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