formidable

Causing fear, dread, awe, or discouragement as a result of size, strength, or some other impressive feature; commanding respect; causing wonder or astonishment.

Adjective

  1. Causing fear, dread, awe, or discouragement as a result of size, strength, or some other impressive feature; commanding respect; causing wonder or astonishment.
    • The latter part of the fifteenth century prepared a train of future events, that ended by raising France to a formidable power, which has ever since been, from time to time, the principal object of jealousy to the other...
    • […] and I am more afraid of those people than I am of Anytus and his colleagues, although they are formidable enough. - 1954, Plato, translated by Hugh Tredennick, “Socrates on Trial: The Apology”, in The Last Days of...

    Synonyms: redoubtable

  2. Difficult to defeat or overcome.
    • a formidable opponent
    • As I look back on that week in China two impressions stand out most vividly. One is the awesome sight of the disciplined but wildly—almost fanatically—enthusiastic audience at the gymnastic exhibition in Peking,...
    • [Ian] Holloway has unfinished business in the Premier League after relegation last year and he will make a swift return if he can overcome West Ham a week on Saturday. Sam Allardyce, the West Ham manager, will be...

Origin

From Middle English formidable, from Old French formidable, formible, from Latin formīdābilis (“formidable, terrible”) (whence -able), from formīdō (“fear, dread”).

Forms

more formidable most formidable

Derived

formidability formidableness formidably informidable superformidable unformidable