释义 |
impenetrableim‧pen‧e‧tra‧ble /ɪmˈpenətrəbəl/ adjective - an impenetrable 25-page memo
- An impenetrable fog halted traffic.
- As she rounded the final corner, the trees were in front of her, a dark and impenetrable barrier hiding the house completely.
- Feminist organizations and the media appeared almost impenetrable to us.
- Granted, the casual observer may dismiss this as impenetrable blarney.
- He would make the Britches impenetrable, tackle the dead trees and plant saplings.
- Their bushes form an impenetrable hedge.
- We followed their tracks down into the swamp where a recent clearcut had left impenetrable thickets of young fir.
- What she once considered oppressive about Joseph, his cold style and impenetrable attitude, now earned her respect.
- Which was further away from the real but impenetrable humanity of these black men and women?
► impenetrable barrier The trees formed a dark and impenetrable barrier. NOUN► barrier· A decade ago this was Checkpoint Charlie, one of the few gaps in an otherwise impenetrable barrier a hundred miles long.· But this normally impenetrable barrier is easily breached by fat-soluble ethanol molecules, which slip through like little ghosts.· Yet some people seem to learn to live with imperfection and others find it an impenetrable barrier.· A rose hedge can become a useful, impenetrable barrier if clipped regularly.· As she rounded the final corner, the trees were in front of her, a dark and impenetrable barrier hiding the house completely. 1impossible to get through, see through, or get into: The trees formed a dark and impenetrable barrier. the impenetrable blackness of the night2very difficult or impossible to understand: impenetrable legal jargon—impenetrably adverb—impenetrability /ɪmˌpenətrəˈbɪləti/ noun [uncountable] |