Implacable in a sentence as an adjective

They're implacable foes that just keep coming, and people don't care as much if the AI is very simple.

Weight is the implacable enemy in aircraft design.

It is tempting to believe that we are at war with an implacable, all-powerful enemy.

You know the seething, implacable anger, that bile that comes up out of your stomach when you think of a politician you don't like?

Whether you function as welders or inspectors, the laws of physics are implacable lie detectors.

The implacable opposition to any sort of standardized testing is ********.

In other words, why not find a way to give these men the most dedicated, competent, and implacable fighters in the entire PLO - a reason to live rather than to die?

The pandemic is more akin to an attack by an irrationally implacable enemy with a couple months advance warning of the threat at the border.

The conservative grass roots were implacable in their opposition to this deal, so Greenspan called Limbaugh and asked Limbaugh to promote the deal on his radio show.

Of course, there are opposing processes in business too, but I guess not the same - multiple, not always directly or continuously opposed, vs. a single implacable enemy.

> As with civilian health care, savings are achievable here but face implacable opposition from military retirees.

When the inevitable cases arise that break the logic of the bureaucratic machine, these escape valves can provide crucial relief from its heartless and implacable nature.

The graph shows a dip on the rightmost side below the leftmost side before going right up to indistinguishable from reality, that's the basic premise of the old uncanny valley hypothesis, that things which are just short of indistinguishable from the real thing are less desirable than fairly good approximations which could not otherwise be confused, due to the feeling that something implacable about them is a little off.

Implacable definitions

adjective

incapable of being placated; "an implacable enemy"