What is another word for was unbelievable?

Pronunciation: [wɒz ʌnbɪlˈiːvəbə͡l] (IPA)

The phrase "was unbelievable" can be replaced with a variety of synonyms to convey the same meaning. Some alternative phrases could include "was astounding," "was incredible," "was inconceivable," "was mind-blowing," "was remarkable," and "was astonishing." These synonyms convey the idea that the event or situation being described was truly shocking or unexpected in its magnitude or impact. Using alternative phrases can help vary sentence structure and add linguistic interest to your writing. When selecting synonyms for "was unbelievable," it's important to choose words that accurately convey the intended meaning and tone of the sentence.

What are the hypernyms for Was unbelievable?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Was unbelievable

  • Hugh Wilson made it so real and he took us and it was almost when he was directing it, the way he would do it was funnier than the way we did it. And I just developed a regard for him that was unbelievable.
    Bubba Smith
  • We have actors from other films, from 'Baywatch,' and so on, and these people are looking exactly the opposite of what they are. The transformations were so smooth, and so funny to watch, it was unbelievable.
    Joe Viterelli
  • People still insist on things like holistic healing and things that have no real basis in evidence because they want it to be true—it’s as simple as that.That’s why James Randi is so good, because he knows what magicians know: if you do a card trick on someone, they will report that it was unbelievable, they describe the effect the magician wanted, and they miss out all the steps in between that seemed irrelevant because the magician made them irrelevant, so they didn’t notice them.
    Stephen Fry
  • Judy lived in my hotel. She was just seventeen, and what she was doing in Paris was supposedly chaperoning her younger brother, a fully fledged concert pianist of fifteen, who was studying there with one of the leading teachers. In view of their combined and startling innocence, however, this was a rather useless arrangement. Their last name was Galache, and they were the issue with which the highly unlikely union of a Quaker woman from Philadelphia and a dreadfully dashing Spaniard (now, alas, dead) had been blessed. Naturally their upbringing, up to this point, had been strict and very sheltered. … Judy was so different from me that it was really ludicrous. Whereas I was hell-bent for living, she was content, at least for the time being, to leave all that to others. Just as long as she could all about it. She really was funny about this. Folded every which way on the floor, looking like Bambi — all eyes and legs and no chin — she would listen for ages and ages with rapt attention to absolutely any drivel that you happened to be talking. It was unbelievable.
    Elaine Dundy

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