unrecuperable
English
Etymology
From Middle English onrecuperable; equivalent to un- + recuperable.
Adjective
unrecuperable (comparative more unrecuperable, superlative most unrecuperable)
- Not recuperable.
- 1534/5, Thomas Elyot, quotee, “Life of Elyot”, in Henry Herbert Stephen Croft, editor, The Boke Named The Gouernour, volume I, London: C. Kegan Paul & Co., published 1880, page cxvi:
- If now, Sir, it mought like you in approvyng your benevolent mynde towad me, wherein I doo specially trust, to sett furth with your gentill report unto the Kinges highness my true hart and diligent indevour in his graces service, to my importable charges and unrecuperable decay of my lyving, onlas his highness relieve me with his abundaunt and graciouse liberalitie;
- 2001 May 5, “I is a gangsta”, in The Guardian, London, Manchester, section “Saturday Review”, page 10:
- As the tale trundles on to its downbeat ending, via crosses and double-crosses at Tilbury Docks, we are left in little doubt as to the unrecuperable sadnesses of J’s life, standing in the tattered ruins of his existence.
Synonyms
Derived terms
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