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    im·plac·a·ble
    /imˈplakəb(ə)l/

    adjective

    • 1. unable to be placated: "he was an implacable enemy of Ted's"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Implacable means unable to be changed, satisfied, or stopped. Learn how to use this formal adjective with sentences and synonyms from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  3. Implacable means not capable of being appeased, significantly changed, or mitigated. It is often used to describe enemies, hatred, or hostility. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related articles.

  4. An implacable person just cant be appeased. If you really offended your best friend and tried every kind of apology but she refused to speak to you again, you could describe her as implacable. Implacable is derived from the verb to placate, which means to soothe, or to appease.

  5. Implacable definition: not to be appeased, mollified, or pacified; inexorable. See examples of IMPLACABLE used in a sentence.

  6. Implacable means unable to be changed, satisfied, or stopped. Learn how to use this formal adjective in sentences and find out its synonyms and antonyms.

  7. Implacable means having very strong feelings of hostility or disapproval which nobody can change. Learn more about its synonyms, pronunciation, collocations, and usage in sentences from Collins Dictionary.

  8. Implacable means that someone or something is very determined to oppose or hate something or someone. Learn how to use this word in sentences and find synonyms and word origin.