From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinvulnerablein‧vul‧ne‧ra‧ble /ɪnˈvʌlnərəbəl/ adjective HARM/BE BAD FORsomeone or something that is invulnerable cannot be harmed or damaged if you attack or criticize them OPP vulnerable Gerry’s confidence made him feel invulnerable.invulnerable to We will not be satisfied until this city is safe and invulnerable to attack. —invulnerability /ɪnˌvʌlnərəˈbɪləti/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
invulnerable• But some accidents happen because of their egocentric tendency to think of themselves as invulnerable.• It was necessary to appear as though innate good fortune made one invulnerable.• The fused, bony plates that protect their soft parts make them well-nigh invulnerable.• As he gazed at the press reports of Woolton's endorsement, he felt invulnerable, almost home.• Her feminism has to do with making yourself the most attractive, invulnerable, compelling object that you can.• To make the city safe and invulnerable to attack, his architects designed a circular plan.• To declare enthusiasm for feminist ideals is almost a new mode of macho, a way to flaunt an invulnerable virility.invulnerable to• Malaria that is invulnerable to drugs is spreading across the world.