different between irrefragable vs intuitable

irrefragable

English

Etymology

From Latin irrefr?g?bilis, from refr?gor (oppose, contest).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /????f????b(?)l/, /?i???fra??b(?)l/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /????f????b(?)l/, /?i???fræ??b(?)l/
  • (UK) IPA(key): /?i???fra??b(?)l/

Adjective

irrefragable (comparative more irrefragable, superlative most irrefragable)

  1. Which cannot be refuted; indisputable, clearly right, incontrovertible. [from 16th c.]
    • 1885, Charlotte M. Yonge, Nuttie's Father, ch. 20:
      Bulfinch, a solicitor at Redcastle, came to him with irrefragable proofs of gross peculation on the part of the bailiff.
    • 1913, Jack London, John Barleycorn, ch. 19:
      [W]e didn't. That is the irrefragable fact. We didn't.
    • 2001 Jan. 14, Harold Evans, "Bookend: White House Book Club," New York Times (retrieved 18 Nov 2012):
      Lionel Trilling has cautioned us that an idea derived from reading is not a unitary, irrefragable thing but something modified in its transmission.

Synonyms

  • (which cannot be refuted): incontestable, incontrovertible, indisputable, indubitable, irrefutable, unanswerable, undeniable, unquestionable

Antonyms

  • refragable

Related terms

Translations

irrefragable From the web:

  • what does irrefragable meaning
  • what does irrefragable
  • what is irrefragable in english
  • what does irrefragable mean


intuitable

English

Etymology

intuit +? -able

Adjective

intuitable (comparative more intuitable, superlative most intuitable)

  1. Capable of being intuitively sensed or understood.

intuitable From the web:

  • what does unsuitable mean
  • what does not unsuitable mean
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