unputdownable

See also: un-put-downable

English

WOTD – 23 April 2020

Etymology

From un- + put down + -able.[1]

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /(ˌ)ʌnpʊtˈdaʊnəb(ə)l/
  • (file)
  • (General American) IPA(key): /ˌənˌpʊtˈdaʊnəb(ə)l/
  • Hyphenation: un‧put‧down‧able

Adjective

unputdownable (comparative more unputdownable, superlative most unputdownable) (informal)

  1. Of a person, etc.: difficult or impossible to put down (in various senses).
    • 1842 June 17, Robert Hull, “On the Division of Medical Labour”, in The London Medical Gazette, being a Weekly Journal of Medicine and the Collateral Sciences, volume II (New Series; volume XXX overall), number 759, London: Printed for Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans, [], OCLC 187499029, page 474, column 2:
      I have known an operating surgeon, because he possessed a medical title, to be elected physician to a county hospital. I have known the surgical staff for years refuse to recognize this irregular. Yet, after all, when he became popular and unputdownable, giving in their isolated adhesions to the conqueror, not because they had altered their sentiments, but that their pockets taught them, like nature, to abhor a vacuum.
    • 1861, The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine: An Illustrated Journal, Combining Practical Information, Instruction, and Amusement, London: S[amuel] O[rchart] Beeton, OCLC 39717152, page 303:
      Finally, we appeal to all right-minded playgoers. Let them remember that they have got tongues, and that a vigorous, unmistakeable, un-put-downable hiss is, in a theatre, a potent instrument.
    • 1985, Antonio Skármeta, Malcolm Coad, transl., I Dreamt the Snow was Burning, London: Readers International, →ISBN, page 60:
      [W]e're unputdownable, like Alcayaga said up 'til last night, and now here we all are happy, unputdownable, dearest old skinny bosom-buddy, you've collapsed on us so early in the morning like a sack of spuds, [...]
    • 1989, Robert Barnard, Death and the Chaste Apprentice (Collins Crime Club), London: Collins, →ISBN; republished as Death and the Chaste Apprentice, New York, N.Y.: Scribner, 2014, →ISBN:
      Des Capper blinked, as if he has been hit with a dictionary. But he was unputdownable, at the same time giving the impression that he was registering all the snubs.
    • 1991, Andrew Yule, Losing the Light: Terry Gilliam and the Munchausen Saga, New York, N.Y.: Applause Books, →ISBN, page 56:
      Only someone with enormous unputdownable optimism would ever have embarked on a project like this.
    • 2005, Mike Hally, Electronic Brains: Stories from the Dawn of the Computer Age, London: Granta, →ISBN:
      But she also remembers Phillips as someone who ‘people liked to be a bit scornful of, the kind of man they would like to put down, although he was unputdownable’.
  2. (specifically) Of a book or other written work: so captivating or engrossing that one cannot bear to stop reading it.
    Synonym: page-turning
    Antonyms: putdownable, put-downable

Alternative forms

Translations

See also

References

  1. unputdownable, adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2014; unputdownable, adj.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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