unsayable

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of unsayable Hordes of us are out there hoping to say the unsayable. Dan Piepenbring, Harpers Magazine, 28 Mar. 2025 The tennis-ball POV from Challengers, Isabelle Huppert’s cat with the unknowable and unsayable name, the children dressed as Serge Gainsbourg on French TV. Bethy Squires, Vulture, 1 Nov. 2024 And the true heroes, consequently, are those who dare to say the unsayable. Megan Garber, The Atlantic, 5 Sep. 2024 This was a composer tasked with saying the unsayable against the unspeakable. Michael Andor Brodeur, Washington Post, 26 Jan. 2024 American literature took a while to say the unsayable. S. C. Cornell, The New Yorker, 9 Dec. 2023 With remarkable speed, however, the unsayable has become close to conventional wisdom. Michael Barnett, Foreign Affairs, 14 Apr. 2023 One senses that there’s an unsayable aspect to it. Michael Brendan Dougherty, National Review, 12 Oct. 2020 And thus stand up for the subconscious, for the unsaid and unsayable, for the historically and personally indigestible, for the unprettified, for the autonomy of an imagination that cannot escape history, and—more than anything else—for black freedom of expression itself. Zadie Smith, The New York Review of Books, 27 Feb. 2020
Recent Examples of Synonyms for unsayable
Adjective
  • Historians are struggling to recover their inexpressible secrets.
    Erin Maglaque, The New York Review of Books, 15 Nov. 2024
  • Historians are struggling to recover their inexpressible secrets.
    Erin Maglaque, The New York Review of Books, 15 Nov. 2024
Adjective
  • Her work often explores indefinable experiences and emotions, intimacy, connection, and the body’s relationship to nature.
    Samantha Bergeson, IndieWire, 19 Mar. 2025
  • An indefinable musical by a French auteur is headed for millions of streaming subscribers.
    Joe Reid, Vulture, 8 Nov. 2024
Adjective
  • People pouring through our borders, unchecked, people doing things that are indescribable and not for today to discuss.
    Avery Lotz, Axios, 26 May 2025
  • People doing things that are indescribable and not for today to discuss.
    Adeola Adeosun, MSNBC Newsweek, 26 May 2025
Adjective
  • To Vulcan, avoiding unknowable businesses isn’t being conservative.
    Jim Osman, Forbes.com, 15 Apr. 2025
  • At the heart of every biography, though, lies a lacuna—something unknowable, no matter how candid or heavily documented the subject, no matter how familiar or diligent the biographer.
    Casey Cep, New Yorker, 14 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Great moments should always possess an inexplicable quality and this one had plenty of those.
    The Athletic UK Staff, New York Times, 2 June 2025
  • Trump, too, has inexplicable lapses of babbling and has fallen asleep at inauspicious moments.
    Sun Sentinel Editorial Board, Sun Sentinel, 29 May 2025
Adjective
  • Consumers have gotten used to a complicated annual plan selection, confusing industry jargon, and incomprehensible coverage policies.
    Dan Gingiss, Forbes.com, 11 Apr. 2025
  • Every version of it, whether recorded in a studio, live with a full orchestra or only a piano, just rails through absolutely incomprehensible storytelling (something about virgins on a spaceship?) with a lusty guitar and smashed piano chords.
    Shana Naomi Krochmal, Vulture, 4 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Rival governments in the west and east of the country jockeyed for control of territory and oil reserves through the use of unaccountable militias.
    Henry Leutwyler Robert Petkoff Emma Kehlbeck Quinton Kamara, New York Times, 20 May 2025
  • Now, Trump says those labor rights Congress established in 1978 make federal workers unaccountable.
    Andrea Hsu, NPR, 11 May 2025
Adjective
  • Besting five runs would’ve been unfathomable for Toronto last week.
    Mitch Bannon, New York Times, 31 May 2025
  • Books, Arts & Manners Books The Second World War’s Masters and Commanders Rich Lowry The choices and predilections of leaders can bring national triumph, or catastrophe and unfathomable suffering.
    Mary Katharine Ham, National Review, 17 Apr. 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Unsayable.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/unsayable. Accessed 10 Jun. 2025.

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