0 (especially of a problem) so great or severe that it cannot be defeated or dealt with successfully --
Despite opportunities provided by privatisation and capitalisation in the 1990s, the private sector faces almost insuperable obstacles to expansion.
However, there are difficulties, although not insuperable ones, in fulfilling either of these conditions.
These demands have often proven insuperable in the past.
In the face of these seemingly insuperable forces, the farmers had to evolve strategies for survival.
Holding a referendum inevitably has some drawbacks, but these are certainly not insuperable.
It is interesting to see how this is accomplished, and also how these boundaries are not insuperable.
After the substitution of foreign markets, the difficulties in recovering the former markets were almost insuperable.
There is here a point of conflict which has so far proved insuperable.