irradicable
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Adjective
[edit]irradicable (not generally comparable, comparative more irradicable, superlative most irradicable)
- (rare) Incapable of being rooted out or eradicated.
- 1876, Louisa May Alcott, “Scarlet Stockings”, in Silver Pitchers: and Independence:
- Of course, the young people flirted, for that diversion is apparently irradicable even in the "best society".
- 1992 October 18, “BEST SELLERS: October 18, 1992”, in New York Times, retrieved 18 November 2012:
- Faces at the Bottom of the Well, by Derrick Bell. (Basic Books, $20.) A law professor argues that racism is an integral, permanent and irradicable component of our society.
- 2008 April 19, Tim Padgett, “A Catholic's Take on the Pope's Trip”, in Time:
- Vatican II, the modernizing church council of the 1960s, emboldened that lay assertiveness among U.S. Catholics as never before; the pedophile tragedy has made the laity's self-reliant spirit irradicable.
Synonyms
[edit]References
[edit]- “irradicable”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.