If you describe something as indescribable, haven’t you already described it?
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Is this a question?
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Answer:
Something indescribable is too intense, extreme or unusual to describe. It's beyond words. Still, this is a great word for when you feel like words just aren't enough. Both words are correct, and mean the same thing, but indescribable is more commonly accepted, and I find that the average person does not read many older books; instead they read the new, recently published books. They have not come upon undescribable, and assume it to be wrong, though that is not the case.The prefixes “in-,” “un-,” “non-,” and “anti-” generally pair up with certain Latin derivatives, and form words like “indescribable,” “nonchalant,” and “antihero.” The prefix “a-,” which means “without,” generally appears with Greek derivatives, as in words like “asymmetrical.”