释义 |
Definition of unbridgeable in English: unbridgeableadjectiveʌnˈbrɪdʒəb(ə)lˌənˈbrɪdʒəb(ə)l (of a gap or difference) not able to be bridged or made less significant. (分歧,差异)无法弥合的;不可逾越的 a seemingly unbridgeable cultural abyss 看上去不可逾越的文化鸿沟。 Example sentencesExamples - The Hague system, rooted on unimpeachably pure democratic principles, has fallen prey to the unbridgeable gap between the world of MPs and the world of the party members.
- That approach had two great advantages: first, it was entirely accurate; and, second, it permitted those of us on the unfavourable side of the comparison to try and do something about bridging the unbridgeable gap.
- Not too many years ago, Buckley points out, ‘there wouldn't have been an unbridgeable disparity between the two, and they would have talked to each other more as equals’.
- I don't think there is an unbridgeable gap - it's more a matter of clarifying who did what and where.
- It is expected that this will particularly help the younger locals for whom the affordability gap is unbridgeable.
- The unbridgeable gap between old and new is shrinking.
- So that is the other reason why this topic interests me - to get a glimpse across the unbridgeable gap.
- By 1550, the gap was unbridgeable and as it widened the policy of the Catholic Church was to become more aggressive.
- Our replica is one attempt to bridge an unbridgeable gap.
- The Wall stood for the proposition that unbridgeable cultural differences exist among peoples.
- Exclusive emphasis on difference divides reality, creating an unbridgeable gap between man and God.
- In fact your book cites a lot of poetry including that of Judith Wright who acknowledges that there's an unbridgeable gap between herself and her close friend, Oodgeroo Noonuccal.
- It is obvious that in both federal states an unbridgeable gap exists between the desire of the population for progressive social policies on one hand and the politics of the ASP on the other.
- Despite all the bravery, determination and skill that saw Kildare so nearly bridge an unbridgeable gap, their interest in the championship is over.
- Spectators may be moved to laugh or cry, but they know that the actor is playing a role in an imaginary world that is not their actual world; it lies on the other side of an unbridgeable gap.
- Contrary to those who maintain that there is an unbridgeable gap between so-called elite and popular opinion, the deliberative poll found the opposite.
- Derrida insisted that the very way in which language functions, that is, signification, necessitates an unbridgeable gap between the signifier and the signified.
- For Mulvey, the gaps between film frames reveal the fetishised world of cinema as nothing but a ‘screen’, and reminds us of the unbridgeable gap between our desires and the ‘real’.
- Turing's view, expressed with great force and wit, was that it was for those who saw an unbridgeable gap between the two to say just where the difference lay.
- They know that the scale of their underfunded pension obligations creates an unbridgeable gap in the context of their potential for economic growth and the cost of their social programmes.
Definition of unbridgeable in US English: unbridgeableadjectiveˌənˈbrijəb(ə)lˌənˈbrɪdʒəb(ə)l (of a gap or difference) not able to be bridged or made less significant. (分歧,差异)无法弥合的;不可逾越的 a seemingly unbridgeable cultural abyss 看上去不可逾越的文化鸿沟。 Example sentencesExamples - By 1550, the gap was unbridgeable and as it widened the policy of the Catholic Church was to become more aggressive.
- Spectators may be moved to laugh or cry, but they know that the actor is playing a role in an imaginary world that is not their actual world; it lies on the other side of an unbridgeable gap.
- Not too many years ago, Buckley points out, ‘there wouldn't have been an unbridgeable disparity between the two, and they would have talked to each other more as equals’.
- Our replica is one attempt to bridge an unbridgeable gap.
- The Hague system, rooted on unimpeachably pure democratic principles, has fallen prey to the unbridgeable gap between the world of MPs and the world of the party members.
- It is expected that this will particularly help the younger locals for whom the affordability gap is unbridgeable.
- Turing's view, expressed with great force and wit, was that it was for those who saw an unbridgeable gap between the two to say just where the difference lay.
- The unbridgeable gap between old and new is shrinking.
- For Mulvey, the gaps between film frames reveal the fetishised world of cinema as nothing but a ‘screen’, and reminds us of the unbridgeable gap between our desires and the ‘real’.
- Contrary to those who maintain that there is an unbridgeable gap between so-called elite and popular opinion, the deliberative poll found the opposite.
- They know that the scale of their underfunded pension obligations creates an unbridgeable gap in the context of their potential for economic growth and the cost of their social programmes.
- Despite all the bravery, determination and skill that saw Kildare so nearly bridge an unbridgeable gap, their interest in the championship is over.
- The Wall stood for the proposition that unbridgeable cultural differences exist among peoples.
- It is obvious that in both federal states an unbridgeable gap exists between the desire of the population for progressive social policies on one hand and the politics of the ASP on the other.
- I don't think there is an unbridgeable gap - it's more a matter of clarifying who did what and where.
- Exclusive emphasis on difference divides reality, creating an unbridgeable gap between man and God.
- Derrida insisted that the very way in which language functions, that is, signification, necessitates an unbridgeable gap between the signifier and the signified.
- In fact your book cites a lot of poetry including that of Judith Wright who acknowledges that there's an unbridgeable gap between herself and her close friend, Oodgeroo Noonuccal.
- So that is the other reason why this topic interests me - to get a glimpse across the unbridgeable gap.
- That approach had two great advantages: first, it was entirely accurate; and, second, it permitted those of us on the unfavourable side of the comparison to try and do something about bridging the unbridgeable gap.
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