impasse|impasses in English
noun
[im·passe || 'ɪmpæs /æm'pɑːs]
deadlock, standstill, place from which there is no escape; dead-end street, cul-de-sac
Use "impasse|impasses" in a sentence
1. An impasse?
2. Negotiations have reached an impasse.
3. The government had reached an impasse.
4. These negotiations quickly reached an impasse.
5. Negotiations seemed to have reached an impasse.
6. The political process is at an impasse.
7. This impasse applied especially to the atomic bomb.
8. Well, quite frankly, we are at an impasse here.
9. They were at the same impasse.
10. By December, they had reached an impasse.
11. 4 However, is there a way out of the impasse?
12. And, thanks to the budget impasse, they have not.
13. Has planning in central London reached a final impasse?
14. Anyhow, we must find a way out of this impasse.
15. I see conundrums, dilemmas , quandaries , impasses, gnarly thickets of fateful possibility with no obvious way out.
16. We reached an impasse over the presidential debate in October.
17. William Right-well, then we have something of an impasse.
18. I see no way out of this impasse.
19. Synonyms for Aporias include contradiction, impasses, paradoxes, incongruousness, challenges, oxymorons, ambiguity, discrepancies, contraventions and contradictions
20. The dispute had reached an impasse, as neither side would compromise.
21. The negotiations had reached an impasse[Sentencedict.com], with both sides refusing to compromise.
22. I’d always name myself Addled which is actually short for Addled Impasse
23. The proposal offered both sides a way out of the diplomatic impasse.
24. The current impasse in the negotiations is therefore a source of serious concern.
25. This accommodation is located in an impasse in the center of Berlin.