Immortal in a sentence as a noun

As we saw with THQ last month, publishers aren't immortal.

> Your immortal you in 500 years might be as different from your current you as your grandchildren.

Finally the truth is plain to see - humans are merely the first step to the true masters of the planet - genetically engineered immortal mice.

" My Neopets were not very worthwhile and, since they're immortal, I imagine they've been starving in a cold computer database for the last way-too-many years.

However a small number of such memories become immortal - each re-living of one such memory is as emotionally strong as the previous one, and so the memory of the pain never weakens.

Immortal in a sentence as an adjective

Biological immortality does not mean immunity from accidents or homicide.

In short, it has a lot of assets, so lending money to it would be more like lending money to my gambling friend who just happens to be an immortal Stu Ungar - yes, he's wildly dysfunctional, but the potential ROI is almost always worth it.

If you want to be immortal, you should encourage society to act in ways that result in longer average lifespans and also to fund anti-ageing research in hopes of achieving the fabled "ageing escape horizon" where medical science advances faster than you die.

Most people seem to imagine this utopia of competition between the ride share companies, but given that Uber is already engaging in immortal practices to eliminate competition and hiring people to schmooze regulators, I doubt that's the direction we're headed.

Immortal definitions

noun

a person (such as an author) of enduring fame; "Shakespeare is one of the immortals"

noun

any supernatural being worshipped as controlling some part of the world or some aspect of life or who is the personification of a force

See also: deity divinity

adjective

not subject to death