immoveable

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English

Etymology

From im- +‎ moveable.

Adjective

immoveable (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of immovable.
    • 1640, William Lithgow, “The Sixt Part”, in The Totall Diſcourſe, Of the rare Adventures, and painefull Peregrinations of long nineteene yeares Travailes from Scotland, to the moſt famous Kingdomes in Europe, Aſia, and Affrica , London: I. Okes, page 249:
      From thence we came without the Eaſtern gate, (ſtanding on a low Banke, called the daughter of Syon, that over-toppeth the valley of Iehoſaphat,) unto an immoveable ſtone, upon the which they ſaid St. Stephen was ſtoned to death, the firſt Martyr of the Chriſtian faith; and the faithfull fore-runner of many noble followers.

Noun

immoveable (plural immoveables)

  1. Alternative form of immovable.

Middle English

Adjective

immoveable

  1. Alternative form of immevable