How to Use unresolvable in a Sentence

unresolvable

adjective
  • In the end, Kennedy concluded that the creative differences were unresolvable, and Lord and Miller were fired.
    Scott Meslow, GQ, 26 June 2017
  • As discontent grows louder in the village, the silent boy seems to hold all its unresolvable tensions.
    Lidija Haas, The New Republic, 27 Apr. 2023
  • Although Kershaw wanted to play in the event, and had gotten a go-ahead from Dodgers brass to do so, his insurance problem proved unresolvable.
    Los Angeles Times, 17 Feb. 2023
  • This practice seems so ingrained as to be unresolvable.
    Washington Post, 28 July 2021
  • Perhaps, at heart, The Good Fight believes that love can transcend politics, even at a time when the conflict in values seems unresolvable.
    Scott Tobias, Vulture, 22 July 2021
  • Some issues may be unresolvable -- such as climate change.
    Manu Raju, CNN, 8 Sep. 2021
  • And the complications are what make her task so daunting, and perhaps unresolvable anytime soon.
    Noah Bierman, Los Angeles Times, 9 June 2021
  • The incessant, unresolvable GOAT debate will get a welcome rest.
    Brian Straus, SI.com, 30 June 2018
  • The Box, in effect, is a Doomsday Machine whose nature and origin are unresolvable mysteries.
    Washington Post, 13 Feb. 2022
  • Her words, appearing in the penultimate episode, also capture the central, unresolvable conflict of an uneven docu-series that tries to confront the topic of race, the monarchy and the British media head-on.
    Salamishah Tillet, New York Times, 16 Dec. 2022
  • But his lawyer again fought back, saying there were unresolvable scheduling conflicts.
    Dallas News, 15 Sep. 2022
  • If an unresolvable problem does show up then the technique can be applied to previous work by the author in question, to see if anything systematic is going on.
    The Economist, 14 June 2018
  • Another referendum on Messi would have found him deficient, compared with Diego Maradona, in the unresolvable debate about the greatest of all time.
    Jeré Longman, New York Times, 11 Oct. 2017
  • There is a seemingly unresolvable contradiction at the heart of any Afghanistan strategy.
    Max Fisher and Amanda Taub, New York Times, 24 Aug. 2017
  • This allows researchers to probe very early epochs of the universe that are otherwise unresolvable with today’s current instruments.
    Alison Klesman, Discover Magazine, 23 June 2017
  • Ultimately, the unresolvable problem turned out to be Young’s inability to understand the band’s lack of desire to become major recording artists.
    Jim Greer, SPIN, 31 July 2022
  • The first sign of unresolvable differences between Cheney and Trump occurred over foreign policy.
    New York Times, 22 Apr. 2021
  • The Simpsons finally responded to the criticism earlier this month with a dismissive episode that blew off the issue as fundamentally unresolvable and out of the hands of the show’s producers and writers.
    Lizzie Plaugic, The Verge, 30 Apr. 2018
  • Consequently, seismic waves capture only slices of plumes, and their properties are often the subject of unresolvable debate.
    Quanta Magazine, 15 Sep. 2021
  • The interference of regional and global powers, combined with the fragmentation of militias and guerrillas on the battlefield, have made the conflict appear all but unresolvable.
    Steve Coll, The New Yorker, 7 Apr. 2017
  • But all interactions with wilderness now are edged with equally unresolvable tragedy, seesawing between the poetic and sublime.
    Hazlitt, 15 Sep. 2022
  • The commission would use city laws and the South Euclid master tree plan, and take into account potentially unresolvable hardships, while determining outcomes.
    Jeff Piorkowski/special To Cleveland.com, cleveland.com, 13 Feb. 2018
  • Between seemingly unresolvable cystic acne, attempting – and failing – to fit in at a new campus my freshman year with an above-average 6-foot frame and the pressure of college admissions, the period was far from idyllic.
    Cady Stanton, USA TODAY, 9 June 2022
  • Each is well equipped for the moment, gesturing, in some element of its design, to the contradictory and possibly unresolvable feelings of the disaffected smartphone user.
    John Herrman, New York Times, 16 May 2018
  • With so many unresolvable questions over precisely where Irma is heading, the state’s 20 million-plus residents are in for days of cruel drama and nonstop visual images of record-setting Irma’s almost unimaginable fury.
    Anthony R. Wood, Philly.com, 6 Sep. 2017
  • We are deft at dissecting novels and plays, pinning down their references and ideologies and unresolvable tensions, but not particularly good at putting things together.
    Irina Dumitrescu, Longreads, 20 Aug. 2020
  • The incidents have galvanized a public that feels neglected and exploited by political and economic elites, and one that has endured great suffering in the wake of Hurricane Maria in 2017 and a seemingly unresolvable debt crisis.
    Zeeshan Aleem, Vox, 20 July 2019
  • There are other unresolvable tensions, too: Architects educated in Europe and the U.S. tried to forge an urban, industrial future for countries that were overwhelmingly rural.
    Curbed, 17 Feb. 2022
  • President Biden on Friday rejected the latest counteroffer on infrastructure spending from a group of Senate Republicans as far too little, leaving the bipartisan talks at what looks to be an unresolvable impasse.
    Eli Stokols, Los Angeles Times, 4 June 2021
  • Who could possibly have been more qualified to transmute a form so many of whose early triumphs were about wholesome heartland heterosexuals finding true love into something more challenging and psychologically complex and even unresolvable?
    Mark Harris, Vulture, 27 Nov. 2021

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

Last Updated: