Adjective that boulder is immovable, even with a bulldozer despite tears and pleading, the police officer was immovable on the matter of a hefty fine for speeding
Recent Examples on the Web
Adjective
There might have been a time in the past when a defensive lineman weighing 370 pounds -- or even 400 -- had a place in college football as an immovable run-stuffer. Mike Rodak | Mrodak@al.com, al, 9 Aug. 2022 However, support columns and other immovable pieces would disrupt the layout. David Woods, The Indianapolis Star, 25 July 2022 The late Queen of Soul’s tax burden had been an immovable hurdle as her heirs sorted out other estate matters — sometimes combatively — in Oakland County Probate Court following her 2018 death. Brian Mccollum, Detroit Free Press, 11 July 2022 The sculptor and the painter can represent the miracle in immovable marble and paint, but finally only a filmmaker can show the metamorphosis happening over time.Los Angeles Times, 13 Apr. 2022 The 6-6, 295-pounder is an immovable object with offers from Akron, Marshall and Kentucky. Jonathan X. Simmons, cleveland, 21 July 2022 The production schedule can be demanding with an immovable December deadline, however. Christopher Arnott, courant.com, 2 Nov. 2021 Anybody who knows Rosen knows that strutting his and Kaplan’s immovable success couldn’t be further from the truth. Rod Berger, Forbes, 7 June 2022 As befits his character’s name, Liotta seems both immovable and toweringly enormous as the kind of crooked cop who thinks nothing of beating, torturing and shooting anyone who gets in his way but whose outer grit belies still deeper, darker motives. Mark Olsen, Los Angeles Times, 26 May 2022 See More