How to Use untamable in a Sentence

untamable

adjective
  • The young golfer sized up one of those seemingly untamable shots out of the thick stuff.
    San Diego Union-Tribune, 14 June 2021
  • My splotchy skin and bushy eyebrows felt untamable; my arms too long.
    Abby Sher, New York Times, 25 Feb. 2020
  • She’s wild and strange — or in a term these cowboys might better understand, untamable.
    Caroline Framke, Variety, 14 Apr. 2022
  • In celebrating this day of the dead and of temporary transformation, give a thought to one of the oldest and most untamable microbes, the rabies virus.
    Rebecca Kreston, Discover Magazine, 31 Oct. 2013
  • But this tranquil childhood lair cannot protect the sisters from the danger ahead as Elsa's untamable powers are revealed.
    Deborah Wilker, Billboard, 15 Sep. 2017
  • The formal, structured design of the chandelier has been reenvisaged as untamable nature.
    Rebecca Ann Hughes, Forbes, 9 Sep. 2021
  • McCracken’s narrator radiates love for her mother, a feisty enthusiast with untamable curls who is indeed the hero of her book.
    Judith Shulevitz, The Atlantic, 21 Oct. 2022
  • Corsican pride is untamable; Corsicans’ allegiance is to their own flag, their own traditions, their own mountain.
    National Geographic, 24 July 2019
  • Among the rich tumult of untamable alleys, shops—intentionally unchanged—are not only storefronts but workshops.
    Tamar Adler, CNT, 31 May 2017
  • By focusing on wild apples, Thoreau was making his standard argument for the uncultivated and untamable aspects of life.
    Longreads, 13 July 2017
  • An altogether untamable stadium in which traditional expectations about what the game is should be set aside and the wonkiness accepted.
    Jeff Bailey, The Denver Post, 4 July 2019
  • An offbeat choice, but everything about Abel Ferrara is offbeat, improbable, untamable, and legend-obscured.
    James Wolcott, HWD, 19 June 2017
  • Dark, explosive, pitiless, destructive, tornadoes are nature at its inhuman extreme, arousing awe and terror, the ultimate in the untamable and unknowable.
    John Timpane, Philly.com, 18 May 2018
  • Its oversize dimensions make tight spaces treacherous, but an astonishing suspension and comfy cabin mean no territory is untamable and no trip is uncomfortable.
    Eric Stafford, Car and Driver, 19 Oct. 2017
  • Through methodical, dispassionate testimony, Hutchinson brought the committee and those watching directly inside Trump’s Oval Office, which bore frightening resemblance to a day-care center catering to a particularly spoiled and untamable child.
    Mark Z. Barabak, Los Angeles Times, 28 June 2022
  • Four-, five- and higher-dimensional shapes are essentially untamable: the range of possibilities is so enormous that mathematicians have limited their ambitions to understanding specialized subclasses of them.
    Quanta Magazine, 2 Oct. 2012

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'untamable.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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