inimitably


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Synonyms for inimitably

in an unreproducible manner

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In addition to its inimitably awesome aesthetic, this .45 ACP equalizer will reliably guard your person and your family, come what may.
Itas here that buses disgorge their payloads of well-to-do tourists from the Chinese mainland a with the emphasis on apay.a But the street is still inimitably Hong Kong.
The launch of The Canvas Hotel, MGallery accelerates the expansion of MGallery in the Middle East, a collection of inimitably enchanting, unique boutique hotels.
A verse of inimitably defiant poet Ustad Daman that he recited to a gathering of Indian Punjabis in 1950s is worth quoting: 'The bloodshot eyes tell the story; you cried and we cried too'.
If Magic Hat is known for anything besides the inimitably surreal messages beneath each of their caps, it's that they put out some risky beers for a large brand.
His newest book, "Willnot," is written in what has been described as his "inimitably spare style" and "haunting and immensely readable," and I found it undeniably very enjoyable.
The grips are cast aluminum bearing burnished stars drawn straight from Betsy Ross's inimitably beautiful banner.
When AI can deliver completely new findings that are outside the purview of our hypothesis, it will inimitably rethink banking; as Tesla has reinvented cars or Netflix has rethought television.
In the Trojan princess Ilia's aria Se il padre perdei - sung by the warmly expressive Sophie Bevan - Mozart accompanies her with his inimitably beautiful wind band music, lovingly conveyed by the CBSO players.
Equally demanding but also inimitably instructive is the ability to explore how patterns of power inequality get reproduced within the prison setting.
It's not the most euphonic of sounds, but it's inimitably Singapore.
They inimitably capture the meeting in vivo of the famous, controversial writer and the young scholar who would become an early historian of his publications, his first biographer, and perhaps his most reliable and insightful literary editor.
Other notable titles in which she inimitably combines comic and dramatic aspects include "A Star Named Wormwood" (1964), "Burglar and Umbrella" (1970), "Laughter Sticks to Your Heels" (1986), "Corpus Delicti" (1991) and "One Cat After the Other" (1993).
The vista is paired with the Constantine Cavafay poem of the same name, as read in English by the inimitably French-accented architect Bernard Khoury.