See Also:

unconquerable (iou) and mow(1) (iou)


unconquerable (iou)



unconquerable adjective. L16.
[from UN-1 + CONQUERABLE.]
That cannot be overcome or defeated by conquest or force (lit. & fig.); invincible. L16.
A. Radcliffe He fought with unconquerable audacity and fierceness. Bosworth Smith Hannibal was still..unconquered, and, as far as they knew, unconquerable.
Unable to be mastered or brought under control; insuperable. M17.
J. Beattie Check'd by..poverty's unconquerable bar. J. Klein Language which aroused in me an unconquerable aversion.
unconquerableness noun M17.
unconquerably adverb M17.

mow(1) (iou)



mow noun1. Now chiefly N. Amer. & dial.
[Old English muga, muha, muwa corresp. to Old Norse mugi swath, (also mugr) crowd, of unkn. origin.]
A stack of hay, corn, beans, peas, etc.; a heap of grain or hay in a barn. OE.
A heap, a pile; a mound, a hillock. LME-L17.
A place in a barn where hay or corn is heaped up. M18.
Comb.: mowburn verb intrans. become mowburnt; mowburnt adjective (of hay, corn, etc.) spoilt by being stacked damp or too green; mowhay dial. a rick-yard.