Word of the Day, July 11: ‘Impalpable’

# Literature Desk
Representational image| Photo: AI
Representational image| Photo: AI

Word of the Day: IMPALPABLE
Pronunciation: UK /ɪmˈpæl.pə.bəl/ or US /ɪmˈpæl.pə.bəl/

Meaning:
'Impalpable' means something that is impossible or extremely difficult to touch, feel, measure, or fully understand.

Examples for daily usage:

  • There was an impalpable tension in the room before the announcement.
  • Love is an impalpable emotion that cannot be weighed or measured.

Origin and history:

The word "impalpable" comes from the Mediaeval Latin word impalpabilis. It combines the prefix im- (meaning "not") with palpabilis, which originates from the Latin verb palpare (meaning "to touch gently" or "to feel"). This gives it the meaning of something incapable of being perceived by touch.

Cultural significance and modern usage

In literary traditions, "impalpable" frequently describes things that are profoundly present but physically absent, bridging the gap between the material and immaterial worlds.

Authors use it to set a tone. For instance, an impalpable tension lingering in a room, or the impalpable glow of twilight.

It captures the haunting nature of ghosts, memories, or the weight of a loved one's presence that remains after they are gone.

The concept embodies the struggle to conceptualise the divine, the soul, or the afterlife. Because humans rely on sensory data, philosophical and religious texts often use "impalpable" to describe the ultimate reality or the supreme being—something that is infinite, invisible, and transcends physical boundaries, thereby demanding faith or abstract thought rather than sensory proof

Culturally, impalpable is often tied to intuition. It articulates those moments when a person knows something is fundamentally true—like a creeping sense of danger or an unexplainable spark of connection—without being able to point to physical, tangible evidence. It captures the essence of saying, "I can’t quite put my finger on it."

Interesting facts:

  • The Latin root 'palpare' also gave English the word 'palpate', a medical term meaning to examine by touch.
  • Scientists once used the word to describe extremely fine particles that seemed almost impossible to detect by touch.

Examples from literature

  1. And, yet, out of it all, over and above all that had happened, impalpable but real, there remained to him a queer sense of power. - Native Son by Richard Wright
  2. Each was blind to the other’s being, Ged being as baffled by impalpable shadows as the shadows were baffled by daylight and by solid things.- A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin
  3. From where he stood he could see the whole valley through an impalpable mist that rose from the earth the night rain had soaked.- The House of the Spirits: A Novel by Isabel Allende
  4. It was exactly as if he was invisible, inaudible, and impalpable. - The Book of Dust: La Belle Sauvage by Philip Pullman

Synonyms:

  • Incorporeal
  • Intangible
  • Immaterial

Antonyms:

  • Tangible
  • Palpable
  • Tactile

Read more word of the day here