different between invulnerable vs undefeatable

invulnerable

English

Etymology

From Middle French invulnérable, from Latin invulner?bilis, from vulner?bilis, from vulner? (I wound), from vulnus (wound).

Adjective

invulnerable (not comparable)

  1. Incapable of being injured; not vulnerable.
  2. Unanswerable; irrefutable
    an invulnerable argument

Related terms

  • invulnerability
  • invulnerably

Translations

References

  • invulnerable in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • invulnerable in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Spanish

Adjective

invulnerable (plural invulnerables)

  1. invulnerable
    Antonym: vulnerable

Related terms

  • invulnerabilidad

invulnerable From the web:

  • what's invulnerable mean
  • invulnerable what does it mean
  • what is invulnerable save
  • what does invulnerable
  • what is invulnerable in tagalog
  • what is invulnerable antonym
  • what is invulnerable in a sentence
  • what does invulnerable means


undefeatable

English

Etymology

From un- +? defeat +? -able.

Adjective

undefeatable (not comparable)

  1. Not defeatable; impossible to defeat.

Noun

undefeatable (plural undefeatables)

  1. Something that has an undefeatable quality.

Synonyms

  • invincible
  • invulnerable
  • impregnable
  • impenetrable

Derived terms

  • defeatable
  • undefeatability
  • (rare) undefeatableness

undefeatable From the web:

  • what undefeatable mean
  • undefeatable what does it mean
  • what do undefeatable meaning
  • what does undefeatable mean in spanish
  • what is undefeatable
  • what rhymes with undefeatable
  • what's another word undefeatable
  • what language is undefeatable
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like