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Synonyms

imaginable

American  
[ih-maj-uh-nuh-buhl] / ɪˈmædʒ ə nə bəl /

adjective

  1. capable of being imagined or conceived.


Other Word Forms

  • imaginableness noun
  • imaginably adverb
  • unimaginable adjective
  • unimaginableness noun
  • unimaginably adverb

Etymology

Origin of imaginable

1325–75; Middle English < Late Latin imāginābilis, equivalent to Latin imāginā ( ) to imagine + -bilis -ble

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

After a lifetime in higher education, McMaster University sociology professor Vic Satzewich thought he had heard every excuse imaginable for why a student couldn’t turn in her homework.

From The Wall Street Journal

Gowda - whose eye-popping collection includes rare editions of the Bible, along with books on every subject imaginable - comes from a farming family where books were a luxury.

From BBC

I learned every imaginable way of swimming, and at night I floated on my back under the stars.

From Literature

It feels like what a musical AI would create when asked to write the most popular song imaginable.”

From The Wall Street Journal

My early smoothie experiments ended with a freezer full of ice-burned banana slices and sad curls of kale — truly the saddest smoothie packs imaginable.

From Salon