0 unable to be stopped or prevented from developing: --
The band has enjoyed a seemingly unstoppable rise in popularity.
1 continuous, or unable to be stopped: --
The band was enjoying what seemed to be an unstoppable rise in popularity.
But after all, the force of this seduction was unstoppable, and the new secular elite developed in two major directions from the end of the eighteenth century.
How are we to reconfigure a new identity for the field and for scholars of the field in the light of these seemingly unstoppable global flows?
The word is sometimes used metaphorically to connote an unstoppable process of destruction, and indeed some forms of brain cancer present the most dire prognosis of any cancer.
This new political talent seemed unstoppable.
Limantour strongly suggested that the foreign railroad trusts were an unstoppable force, arguing that the only absolute protection against them was nationalisation.
Might more family firms have resisted what industry leaders clearly believed to be the onward and unstoppable march of progress?
Deceptive in that it seems very ordinary at first but rapidly becomes unstoppable.
It is the very indicator of intensified commercialization, consumerism and unstoppable urbanization.