Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
He explored gently at first, then as she responded with soft, insuppressible cries of enjoyment, his touch gradually became harder and faster.
"Vicar has his butter fra Brown's by rights," said the insuppressible servant-woman.
Then an unexpected yearning for Pitchwife panged her: his insuppressible spirit might have buoyed her against her forebodings.
Because of an insuppressible slave rebellion in St. Domingue, modern day Haiti, among other reasons, Bonaparte's North American plans collapsed.
Edward had seen Elizabeth Woodville; she had refused to become his mistress: and therefore, because of his insuppressible desire for her, he had been forced to marry her.
The Walls of Our World: this story explores the internal, almost insuppressible lust within all humankind, regardless of the masks of occupation, status, and position in the social hierarchy.
They've embraced their schoolboy selves and are simply singing songs of love and good cheer, albeit on a grand scale that somehow seems smaller due to the group's insuppressible niceness."
The Giants returned to Giants Stadium today, hosts again to an important game before a sellout crowd, with the ghost of their last game in the building an uninvited but insuppressible companion.
Withdrawn and reserved when sober, Dyer was insuppressible when drunk, and often attempted to "pull a Bacon" by buying large rounds and paying for expensive dinners for his wide circle.
Charles Kickham was the author of three well-known stories, dealing sympathetically with Irish life and manners and the simple faith, the joys and sorrows, the quaint customs and the insuppressible humour of the peasantry.
Shortly after trimming their name to "Funk Trek Voyager" in 2008, the band decided to primarily write only instrumental music, eventually becoming known for their insuppressible groove and their smooth blend of funk, jazz and experimental music.
He was so young, so insuppressible, so elated to be again with the Isbu, his people, that, I think, he did not soberly consider whether or not he would be likely to be welcome at such an encounter, even as a bystander.
Over all, a primordial silence reigned - a silence fraught with the burden of things unutterable by human speech - with the furtive pulse of an esoteric and exotic life, the secret breathing of unformulable passion, of unapprehended peril, the spirit of a vast and insuppressible fecundity.