It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 3rd.
Today's word is insuperable, spelled I-N-S-U-P-E-R-A-B-L-E.
Insuperable is an adjective.
Something described as insuperable is impossible to gain control of, solve, or overcome.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the LA Times by Charles McNulty.
A love story comes into meteoric focus in this musical, The Lonely Few,
which features a book by Rachel Bonds and a score by Zoe Sarnak.
A love story comes into meteoric focus in this musical, The Lonely Few,
which features a book by Rachel Bonds and a score by Zoe Sarnak.
to women who are attached to their cultural roots,
yet alienated by the conservative values of their communities,
hold for each other the answer to problems that, until now, have seemed insuperable.
Insuperable is a super word, that is,
it belongs to a family of English terms that come from the Latin word super, meaning over.
It first appeared in print in the 14th century,
and as a close synonym of the word insurmountable, it still essentially means what it did then.
Insuperable comes directly from the Latin word insuperabilis,
which was formed by combining the negative prefix in, in, with the verb superare,
which comes from super, and means to surmount, overcome,
or excel, and the adjective abilis, meaning able.