unpalatable

English

Etymology

un- + palatable

Adjective

unpalatable (comparative more unpalatable, superlative most unpalatable)

  1. Unpleasant to the taste.
    • 1905 January 12, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], The Scarlet Pimpernel, popular edition, London: Greening & Co., published 20 March 1912, →OCLC:
      In one corner of the room there was a huge hearth, over which hung a stock-pot, with a not altogether unpalatable odour of hot soup emanating therefrom.
    • 1905, Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, →OCLC:
      She did not mean to pamper herself any longer, to go without food because her surroundings made it unpalatable.
  2. (by extension) Unpleasant or disagreeable.
    • 1876, Mark Twain [pseudonym; Samuel Langhorne Clemens], The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Hartford, Conn.: The American Publishing Company, →OCLC:
      But enough of this. Homely truth is unpalatable.
    • 1895, Anthony Hope, Frivolous Cupid:
      "This is very perplexing," said Duke Deodonato, and he knit his brows; for as he gazed upon the beauty of the damsel, it seemed to him a thing unnatural, undesirable, unpalatable, unpleasant, and unendurable, that she should wed Dr. Fusbius.
    • 2003, Jack Shadoian, Dreams and Dead Ends: The American Gangster Film, page 196:
      A plain, seemingly graceless stylist, his rather unpalatable movies, full of rabid, sloggingly orchestrated physical pain and psychic damage, picture crime as a monstrous, miasmal evil, divesting it of any glamour it ever had.
    • 2016 February 8, Marwan Bishara, “Why Obama fails the leadership test in the Middle East”, in Al Jazeera English:
      Their capacity for talking so much and saying so little is astonishing. Their verbosity is unpalatable.

Synonyms

Translations

Noun

unpalatable (plural unpalatables)

  1. Anything distasteful.
    • 1934, Your Germs and Mine, page 295:
      In the severer cases of hookworm the patient sometimes has an appetite for soil, paper, hair, clay, chalk, starch, and other unpalatables.
    • 1990, Dido Davies, Andrew Davies, William Gerhardie: A Biography, page 164:
      His wife, a small woman who walked always on high heels, borrowed Gerhardie's primus stove several times a day to cook her husband gargantuan meals of cockles, mussels, snails, and other such unpalatables.
    • 2019, Paul Williams, Andreas Krebs, The Illusion of Invincibility:
      Denial and disbelief tend to be the default, not a pragmatic embracing of unthinkables and unpalatables. The way things have been is not the way they are and will soon be.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.