immovable
/ɪˈmuːvəbəl/
adjective
- Not able to be moved; fixed in place.
- The furniture was bolted to the floor and completely immovable.
- The heavy statue was immovable without a crane.
- They tried to push the car, but it was immovable in the mud.
- Not capable of being changed or influenced; unyielding.
- She was immovable in her commitment to the project.
- The judge remained immovable in her decision.
- His opinion on the matter was immovable despite all the arguments.
noun
- Something that cannot be moved, especially a piece of property like land or a building.
- In law, land and buildings are considered immovables.
- The inheritance included several immovables, such as a house and a farm.
- They sold all their immovables before moving abroad.