different between unpassible vs unpassable
unpassible
English
Etymology
un- +? passible
Adjective
unpassible (comparative more unpassible, superlative most unpassible)
- (obsolete) Unpassable.
- (obsolete) Impassible.
unpassible From the web:
unpassable
English
Etymology
un- +? passable
Adjective
unpassable (not comparable)
- Not able to be passed.
- 2012, David Westphal, Thy Will Be Done in Me: Living the Lord's Prayer (page 81)
- For many, the discerning of God's will seems like an insurmountable trial or an unpassable test. Rather than complete the exam, they'd just as soon walk away.
- (tennis) Not able to be passed; not capable of being beaten at the net by a passing shot.
- 2012, David Westphal, Thy Will Be Done in Me: Living the Lord's Prayer (page 81)
- (LGBT) Unable to pass successfully as the gender one wishes to be seen as.
- 2009, Lannie Rose, Everything Nice (page 191)
- I resolved that night that I would never, ever turn my back on a transgender friend — be they transsexual, cross-dresser, drag queen, or gender-fuck — no matter how unpassable they might be or how much they might get me clocked.
- 2009, Lannie Rose, Everything Nice (page 191)
See also
- impassable
unpassable From the web:
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