uncontestable
/"+/ (ame, mw)
uncontestable — adjective
- uncontestablepositive
- more uncontestablecomparative
- most uncontestablesuperlative
1. If a fact, claim, result, or right is uncontestable, there is such strong suppor
If a fact, claim, result, or right is uncontestable, there is such strong support for it that nobody can seriously challenge it.
The photos gave the police uncontestable proof that Leo was home.
common collocation: uncontestable proof
After the replay, it became uncontestable that Mina touched the ball last.
pattern: become uncontestable that + clause
The school records made Nadia's age uncontestable during the court case.
The map gave the villagers an uncontestable right to use the road.
After ten years of wins, Yara's role in the club's success is uncontestable.
- incontestable
very close in meaning and equally formal
- indisputable
common in formal writing when the evidence is clear
- undeniable
less stiff and more common in everyday English
- contestable
open to challenge or argument
- debatable
more common for points people can still argue about
文法句型
uncontestable + noun
be or become uncontestable
make + noun + uncontestable
用法筆記
Often appears in legal, academic, or official writing rather than casual speech. It commonly modifies nouns such as proof, right, claim, or evidence, and it also appears after verbs like make and become before a that-clause.