English to Urdu Dictionary impenetrable

impenetrable

ابھیدی
definition
adjective
a dark, impenetrable forest
impossible to pass through or enter.
impenetrable interviews with French intellectuals
impossible to understand.
example
The island is full of 'impenetrable' virgin forest ill-suited to bikes, leaving the last leg to be completed on foot.
For non-Londoners it must be an 'impenetrable' puzzle.
Thus, the initiated are separated by high fences and 'impenetrable' jargon from the ordinary folk.
When present, it often forms dense, 'impenetrable' thickets.
But I suppose it was too much to expect for him to have a black, twirly moustache and for her to cackle mysteriously from beneath an 'impenetrable' black shroud.
Perhaps they had gotten caught up in an 'impenetrable' area of the forest and had to find a way around instead of simply going through.
The wording of the document is really very easy to understand; it is not written in the usual 'impenetrable' verbiage of the Treaties.
The 'impenetrable' jargon of much postmodern writings is an issue as well.
Indeed, paddling up the creek is the best way to get into the dense surrounding forest, which is otherwise nearly 'impenetrable' .
Truth be told, our music is a smoky, 'impenetrable' fortress.
So the Romans decided it was not the primitive barbarians known as the Caledonii who had defeated them, but the vast 'impenetrable' forest covering the country now known as Scotland.
The first three chapters of the book are hard going and, at times, 'impenetrable' and needlessly obscure.
In this way the seemingly 'impenetrable' barriers that separated the two groups began to fall away.
He might just be the model academic in that he elucidates the otherwise 'impenetrable' idiolect of abstruse theory by using the vernacular of Pop cult allusion, and he makes it seems as if the two were made for one another.
To my horror though, I did not catch myself upon hitting the wall, but proceeded to pass through it into 'impenetrable' darkness.
I found some of the interviews in this book fascinating, others I found 'impenetrable' ; but my general feeling was that book didn't deliver.
Unfortunately, anything that involves more than a simple sense is more complicated and the barriers are often 'impenetrable' .
They forget, if they ever knew, that Shakespeare can seem 'impenetrable' .
In front of him was an 'impenetrable' wall that he could not see his way around.
The country night was one of an almost 'impenetrable' darkness, accentuated by the occasional faint pinprick of light.
I just knew that one day the battalion of trees would overtake this weak stretch of highway and obscure its existence with an 'impenetrable' density.
The creation of life in general and of the human person in particular is a thing we can know a little about, but also a thing which is shrouded in 'impenetrable' mystery.
But for most parents the school classroom is a place as mysterious and 'impenetrable' as their teenager's bedroom.
Ask a financial market dealer or analyst, and a spray of 'impenetrable' jargon appears.
But as a technology columnist, I'm in the business of coming up with confusing and 'impenetrable' reactions to events around me.
Lots of fields have their own jargon that is 'impenetrable' to outsiders.
Unfortunately, her last escapade with William had taught her that bathrooms were virtually 'impenetrable' fortresses.
The mystery is not 'impenetrable' to intellect or unintelligible in itself; rather, it is not fully intelligible to us.
The spiky reed makes areas 'impenetrable' , both for hunting and for cattle grazing.
Growing an 'impenetrable' thicket is an alternative option that could blend in with the view beyond the boundary.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one