unbridgeable gap

Frequency: 4.00.8 per million words

A difference between two people, ideas, or groups that is so large it cannot be reduced or reconciled.

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Examples (20)

  • Scholars often speak of the unbridgeable gap between the two cultures.
  • The civil war left an unbridgeable gap between the two communities.
  • After months of talks, there remains an unbridgeable gap between labor and management on wages.
  • Critics argue there is an unbridgeable gap between his promises and his actions.
  • For many voters, the scandal created an unbridgeable gap between his words and his deeds.
  • The unbridgeable gap in wealth continues to grow in many developing nations.
  • The age difference seemed an unbridgeable gap, and the relationship never took off.
  • Despite their long talks, an unbridgeable gap in understanding remained.
  • Rapid innovation has opened an unbridgeable gap between early adopters and everyone else.
  • Digital technology has created an unbridgeable gap between generations.
  • Their worldviews were so far apart that an unbridgeable gap separated them.
  • The two political parties seem to have reached an unbridgeable gap on climate policy.
  • The CEO warned of an unbridgeable gap between investor expectations and what the team could deliver if the timeline slipped.
  • Her upbringing in the city created an unbridgeable gap between her and her rural relatives.
  • Decades of segregation left an unbridgeable gap between school districts in educational outcomes.
  • The report highlights an unbridgeable gap in the quality of education across the country.
  • On social media, there’s an unbridgeable gap between what is promised and what ultimately ships.
  • Scientists and philosophers often find themselves facing an unbridgeable gap in methodology.
  • The treaty collapsed because negotiators hit an unbridgeable gap on core security issues.
  • They divorced because of what they described as an unbridgeable gap in their values.