🤯

incredible

intermediateB1

/ɪnˈkrɛdəbl/ · in-cre-di-ble

difficult to believe; extraordinary.

Meanings

adjectiveformal

difficult to believe; extraordinary.

ایسا جو یقین کرنے میں مشکل ہو؛ غیر معمولی۔

ناقابلِ یقین

naqabil-e yaqeen

Synonyms

unbelievableextraordinaryamazingناقابلِ یقینعجیبشاندار

Antonyms

believableordinarycommonیقین کرنے کے قابلعامسادی

Common Collocations

  • incredible offer
  • incredible talent
  • incredible journey

Example Sentences

The magician performed an incredible trick that amazed everyone.

جادوگر نے ایک ناقابلِ یقین کرتب پیش کیا جو سب کو حیران کر دیا۔

Jadugar ne ek naqabil-e yaqeen karatab pesh kiya jo sab ko hairaan kar diya.

Her achievements are truly incredible given the challenges she faced.

اس کی کامیابیاں واقعی ناقابلِ یقین ہیں جو چیلنجز کے مدنظر رکھی گئی ہیں۔

Us ki kamiyabiyan waqai naqabil-e yaqeen hain jo challenges ke madde nazar rakhi gayi hain.

The view from the mountaintop was incredible, leaving us speechless.

پہاڑ کی چوٹی سے منظر ناقابلِ یقین تھا، جس نے ہمیں خاموش کر دیا۔

Pehar ki choti se nazar naqabil-e yaqeen tha, jis ne hume khaamosh kar diya.

Easily Confused With

incredible vs. incredulous:Incredible means something is hard to believe, while incredulous describes someone who finds it hard to believe something.

Word Family

incredibly
adverbناقابلِ یقین طور پر
incredibility
nounناقابلِ یقینیت

See Also

💡 Memory Tip

Think of 'incredible' as not credible, something that stretches belief.

Imagine a magician pulling a rabbit out of a hat, something that's hard to believe.

✍️ Urdu Poetry

زندگی کی حقیقتوں کا سامان موجود ہے، نا قابل یقین افسانے ہیں خوابوں کے عوض۔

Zindagi ki haqeeqaton ka saaman maujood hai, naqabil-e yaqeen afsanay hain khwabon ke aaz.

There are realities of life present, Incredible tales are in exchange for dreams.

Unknown, Unverified

* Poetry attribution is AI-generated and may require verification.

🗣️ Urdu Proverb

دیکھو اور مان لو

Dekho aur maan lo

See and believe

📖 Etymology

Origin: Latin "incredibilis" — not able to be believed

First known use: 15th century

The term 'incredible' has evolved from the Latin 'incredibilis', combining the prefix 'in-' meaning 'not' and 'credibilis' meaning 'believable'. It was adopted into Middle English with its current meaning.