inaccessiblein‧ac‧ces‧si‧ble /ˌɪnəkˈsesəbəl◂/ AWL adjective - The bathroom is situated at the top of a flight of stairs, making it inaccessible to the disabled.
- The country consists mainly of dense jungles and inaccessible mountain ranges.
- These mountain villages are completely inaccessible in winter.
- This textbook would be inaccessible to my students.
- Bouvet Island, desolate, inaccessible and almost entirely icebound.
- From whatever inaccessible pit of bitterness the words reached out to touch an empty place in her own life.
- Homeworkers are often invisible and inaccessible.
- In less fertile and inaccessible regions, introducing free market forces and removing state subsidies brought poverty instead of wealth.
- In the north, only a small part of Sutherland remained to be surveyed but the area was relatively inaccessible.
- She could describe things like the difference between horses now and then, stuff that is virtually inaccessible.
- Some are very inaccessible and he has to wade through thick mud to get at them.
- They also enable you to tap into otherwise pretty inaccessible international markets.
a place that is difficult or impossible to reach► inaccessible impossible to reach: · The country consists mainly of dense jungles and inaccessible mountain ranges.inaccessible to: · The bathroom is situated at the top of a flight of stairs, making it inaccessible to the disabled.
NOUN► area· This can be twisted and removed for use in inaccessible areas.· It is a remote and inaccessible area and he would never have gone off in the dark.
nounaccessaccessibility ≠ inaccessibilityadjectiveaccessible ≠ inaccessibleverbaccessadverbaccessibly ≠ inaccessibly