beyond+help

  • 111sunk — /sungk/, v. 1. a pt. and pp. of sink. adj. 2. Informal. beyond help; done for; washed up: If they catch you cheating, you re really sunk. 3. Naut. (of a forecastle or poop) raised less than a full deck above the weather deck of a ship. [1925 30… …

    Universalium

  • 112Battle of Suoi Chau Pha — Part of the Vietnam War …

    Wikipedia

  • 113Otto Merz — Born June 12, 1889(1889 06 12) Bad Cannstatt Died May 18, 1933(1933 05 18) Berlin, Germany Nationality German Occupation chauffeur, en …

    Wikipedia

  • 114desperate — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. hopeless, incurable; reckless, rash, foolhardy; furious, heroic. See rashness, hopelessness. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Hopeless] Syn. despairing, despondent, deSirous, in extremities; see hopeless… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 115sunk — sʌŋk adj. doomed, ruined, beyond help (Informal) sɪŋk n. wash basin; sewer, drain; cesspool; place where criminals gather; device that disposes of excess energy within an electrical circuit (Electronics); receiver, device that receives data… …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 116a goner — something that is lost or beyond help    I thought he was a goner, but the cat came back. He s home …

    English idioms

  • 117helpless — a. 1. Weak, feeble, powerless, impotent, imbecile, disabled, infirm. 2. Exposed, defenceless, unprotected. 3. Irremediable, beyond help, remediless, irreparable, irretrievable, desperate …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 118incorrigible — a. 1. Irremediable, remediless, irreparable, irretrievable, irreversible, irremedicable, irrecoverable, helpless, hopeless, incurable, past cure, past mending, beyond help. 2. Obdurate, hardened, lost, shameless, graceless, recreant,… …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 119sunk — adj Slang. done for, washed up, beyond help; ruined, demolished, kaput; bankrupt, on the rocks; had it …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 120sunk — [[t]sʌŋk[/t]] v. 1) a pt. and pp. of sink 2) inf beyond help; done for; undone • Etymology: 1920–25 …

    From formal English to slang