Invincible in a sentence as an adjective

Maybe you're just another dumb young adult who thinks they're invincible.

It's sort of like the villain in a movie who thinks he's invincible then sees his blood for the first time.

" They're not worried about that just because young people are feckless and think they're invincible.

Only this time they can do all this stuff from their own home so they feel invincible until they get a knock at their doors.

One which is only killable by fire, the other by ice, the last one is invincible but tries to bite you.

Our imaginations about what might be at the other end of that wire convinced us that maybe we weren't as invincible as we thought.

Right now reddit might not care about that because it has such a large user base, but I would remind them that Slashdot and Digg also thought they were invincible once.

The employees and the owners get ******, but executives get to flit about from one cushy job to another on account of building a web of connections that makes them effectively invincible.

Gold may seem invincible now and it may seem that the world is only going to continue falling apart and Helicopter Ben is only going to keep running the presses, but don't you remember a time when stocks did nothing but go up?

You give the officer an out - he was "confused" and whatnot - but when you hold power over the general population, "bad calls" aren't as easily forgivable, because they cause real world harm - and every time they aren't held to account, police feel a bit more invincible.

"* * * * *I think the spirit of what is being said in 'The Art of War', is the same principle that's being discussed in the article: Don't rush into striking before you are sure of victory, and lose everything; instead use the advantage to build yourself into an invincible position, with less risk.

Invincible definitions

adjective

incapable of being overcome or subdued; "an invincible army"; "her invincible spirit"

See also: unbeatable unvanquishable