[ adj ] not capable of being stopped <adj.all> as unstoppable as the wind
A thin young bowler tore down the hill and bowled furiously, then followed through with unstoppable momentum, almost as fast as the ball. He was one of three generations of Tevershams involved in the match.
Although eventually denied, they made the crisis unstoppable. The September crisis produced massive windfall profits for many banks and financial institutions at the expense of the industrial world's central banks.
Together, they've always been unstoppable, and they still will be."
They recognise that Hollyhocks are victims to the unstoppable disease of rust.
THA is only a partially inflated life raft with an unstoppable leak.
Then he unleashed his own, unstoppable, attack.
The trend towards big clubs and European competition is commercially unstoppable.
He spent the past two weeks fighting for his political life - telling friends that he must not be made a scapegoat, urging support from colleagues. But the tide became unstoppable.
The seemingly unstoppable advance of the welfare state cannot be indefinitely sustained by the working population.
Privatisation, from its tentative beginnings in the UK a decade ago, seems unstoppable. Except, that is, in the UK itself.
Barry has been concerned that if Jackson moves to Washington, and Barry is damaged by the Lewis trial, "Jesse will gather a full head of steam and be unstoppable," said the aide.