No. Use 'indescribable'.
The word is spelled "indubitably", and is essentially the same as undoubtedly.
percept i think =P
The word for something which can't be defined is "indefinable."
the word rag in a sentence
yes "indescribable" is indeed a description word!
a bad one
The word "indi-maipaliwanag" in Tagalog is used to describe something that is indescribable.
indescribable
No. Use 'indescribable'.
indescribable
The word is spelled "indubitably", and is essentially the same as undoubtedly.
percept i think =P
("Indescribable"means "cannot be described." So it literally cannot "describe" a person, but it can define them. The word is seldom used for a person, but for an attribute, to mean either elusive or extreme.) Example: The candidate inspired an indescribable feeling of trust among his constituents. His rage was indescribable, a violent tantrum that surprised even his closest colleagues.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'indescribable' is inenarrabilis. The Latin form of the adjective has only one ending regardless of the feminine, masculine or neuter gender of the noun that it modifies. As an adverb, the Latin equivalent of 'indescribably' is 'inenarrabiliter'. The word 'indescribable' also may be translated by a special phrase. That phase is 'nescio quis'. For example, the English phrase 'that wonderful and indescribable thing' may be translated as illud nescio quid praeclarum. In the word-by-word translation, the demonstrative pronoun 'illud' means 'that'. The phrase 'nescio quid' means 'indescribable'. The adjective 'praeclarum' means 'wonderful'.
Indescrivible is an Italian equivalent of the English word "indescribable."Specifically, the Italian word is the singular form of an adjective that means "beyond description, indescribable." It serves as both the feminine and masculine form. The pronunciation is "een-DEH-skree-VEE-bee-leh."
Unexplainable, indescribable, undefinable.