unsearchable

Definition of unsearchablenext

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of unsearchable All that stuff is unsearchable in a way that someone could refer to in any real academic sense. Nicholas Quah, Vulture, 13 Feb. 2026 The message disappears into an unsearchable thread or gets lost entirely due to chat retention policies. Sarah Chambers, Forbes.com, 8 Aug. 2025 His understanding is unsearchable. John Biggs, Christian Science Monitor, 21 May 2025 Hearst’s New York Daily Mirror, former rival of the Daily News, is also unsearchable. Voice Of The People, New York Daily News, 22 Feb. 2024 Amid outcry from Swift’s fans on social media, lawmakers and the actors’ union SAG-AFTRA, X made the Grammy winner’s name unsearchable on its platform over the weekend. Alexandra Del Rosario, Los Angeles Times, 29 Jan. 2024 Taylor Swift became unsearchable on X, just days after deepfake images of her in pornographic and violent situations went viral. Democrat-Gazette Staff From Wire Reports, arkansasonline.com, 29 Jan. 2024 All the work Suffolk detectives had done on the case was unsearchable — accessible only to a few detectives who were relying on their own limited memories of the case. Robert Kolker, New York Times, 19 Oct. 2023 A week after topping Apple’s iTunes chart, popular versions of a Hong Kong protest anthem are unsearchable on the platform, as the government tries to outlaw the song in the city’s courts. Kari Lindberg, Fortune, 14 June 2023
Recent Examples of Synonyms for unsearchable
Adjective
  • But there was nothing but heavy silence, inscrutable and somewhat unnerving.
    Carly Tagen-Dye, PEOPLE, 1 May 2026
  • The cult status Drain Gang commands online has created an inscrutable, near-mythical air around its members.
    Harry Thorfinn-George, Pitchfork, 27 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • This includes courses such as the notoriously recondite organic chemistry as well as biology, general chemistry, and physics.
    Richard Menger MD MPA, Forbes.com, 18 Aug. 2025
  • Social Security’s internal workings are so recondite and poorly understood by average voters that numerous possible ways of imposing benefit cuts or otherwise harming the program are hiding in plain sight.
    Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 26 Nov. 2024
Adjective
  • The majesty of the natural world and the incomprehensible vastness of space are almost infinitely rearrangeable variables for documentarians.
    David Faris, TheWeek, 13 Apr. 2026
  • Arthur is a creepy dude, a generic-looking cellphone store employee with an incomprehensible plan.
    Amy Nicholson, Los Angeles Times, 9 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • Chess can seem abstruse and forbidding to the uninitiated, but Himelfarb’s account of it is as readable and comprehensible as any more familiar sports story—or, for that matter, any narrative in which a bunch of ambitious people pursue a single goal.
    Louisa Thomas, New Yorker, 26 Apr. 2026
  • Pitching a book as abstruse as Your Name Here as a kind of cash grab is the novel’s wry joke.
    Robert Rubsam, The Atlantic, 1 Jan. 2026
Adjective
  • More often those concert performances help pump up a flashy, superficial look at an enigmatic artist whose closest connections were of the animal variety (Bubbles gets screen time; ditto a giraffe, a llama and a big snake).
    Randy Myers, Mercury News, 23 Apr. 2026
  • Decades later, however, the origin story of these carbon spheres remains enigmatic.
    Elizabeth Howell, Space.com, 23 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • The Balcony is textbook Manet—grand in ambition, ingeniously composed, visually charismatic, and socially unfathomable.
    Susan Tallman, The New York Review of Books, 25 Apr. 2026
  • This release coincides with the tenth anniversary of the death of His Purple Highness, the singer, songwriter, producer, philanthropist, musician and multi-instrumentalist with an unfathomable life and work.
    Darío Gael Blanco, Vanity Fair, 25 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • As esoteric as its collection may seem, the bookstore itself makes exploration approachable.
    Kat Chen, Condé Nast Traveler, 25 Apr. 2026
  • Afshar has been returning to Iran’s southern islands of Hormuz and Qeshm since 2015, photographing the land, its residents and the invisible, esoteric forces that shape life there — the winds, which locals believe to be powerful entities.
    Adam Pourahmadi, CNN Money, 22 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • Still, even as the memes become borderline unintelligible, Kirkslop contains an air of transgression that imbues the otherwise inane edits and images with perverse political undercurrents.
    Brady Brickner-Wood, New Yorker, 29 Apr. 2026
  • In it, a local TV meteorologist played by Emily Blunt goes mute mid-broadcast and comes out instead with a series of unintelligible noises that rivet viewers.
    Matt Grobar, Deadline, 15 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Unsearchable.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/unsearchable. Accessed 2 May. 2026.

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