Word
Of
The
Day
implacable
implacable \im-PLAK-uh-bul\
adjective
Someone or something described as implacable is not capable of being appeased or changed.
// The project faced
implacable resistance from community members, and is now off the table.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Unlike, say, the globetrotting stories of Ian Fleming or John le Carré, in which victories only temporarily frustrate an
implacable foe, [Agatha] Christie’s smaller worlds feel put right when the cover closes or credits roll.” —
The Economist, 17 Jan. 2026
Did you know?
Implacable is rooted in the Latin verb
placare, meaning “to soothe,” but its
im- prefix is a variant of the negating prefix
in- (as in
inactive) and it signals that there’s nothing warm and fuzzy here. Someone or something described as
implacable cannot be soothed, which usually means trouble:
implacable is most often attached to words like
foe,
enemy,
hatred and
hostility. The opposite of
implacable is, of course,
placable; it means “easily soothed,” but sadly isn’t called upon very often. Another
placare word is likely more familiar.
Placate means “to soothe or appease”; it’s frequently applied when an angry person is made to feel less so.