“My colleague's body is amazing”





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36















My colleague's body is amazing:




  • She's comfortable wearing sleeveless clothing while the rest of us are shivering in jumpers

  • She can travel halfway around the world for two weeks, then come back and work the full workday immediately with no visible sign of jet lag

  • She gets away with eating chocolate for lunch (!)


Her body is so amazing I'm envious.



The problem is, by saying "my colleague's body is amazing" I'm sure many will interpret the statement as saying my colleague is sexy/physically attractive. How can I convey my meaning without that implication?










share|improve this question




















  • 6





    Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    2 days ago











  • @ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

    – Allure
    2 days ago











  • @Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    yesterday






  • 1





    @ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

    – Allure
    yesterday











  • @Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

    – Allure
    yesterday


















36















My colleague's body is amazing:




  • She's comfortable wearing sleeveless clothing while the rest of us are shivering in jumpers

  • She can travel halfway around the world for two weeks, then come back and work the full workday immediately with no visible sign of jet lag

  • She gets away with eating chocolate for lunch (!)


Her body is so amazing I'm envious.



The problem is, by saying "my colleague's body is amazing" I'm sure many will interpret the statement as saying my colleague is sexy/physically attractive. How can I convey my meaning without that implication?










share|improve this question




















  • 6





    Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    2 days ago











  • @ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

    – Allure
    2 days ago











  • @Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    yesterday






  • 1





    @ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

    – Allure
    yesterday











  • @Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

    – Allure
    yesterday














36












36








36


2






My colleague's body is amazing:




  • She's comfortable wearing sleeveless clothing while the rest of us are shivering in jumpers

  • She can travel halfway around the world for two weeks, then come back and work the full workday immediately with no visible sign of jet lag

  • She gets away with eating chocolate for lunch (!)


Her body is so amazing I'm envious.



The problem is, by saying "my colleague's body is amazing" I'm sure many will interpret the statement as saying my colleague is sexy/physically attractive. How can I convey my meaning without that implication?










share|improve this question
















My colleague's body is amazing:




  • She's comfortable wearing sleeveless clothing while the rest of us are shivering in jumpers

  • She can travel halfway around the world for two weeks, then come back and work the full workday immediately with no visible sign of jet lag

  • She gets away with eating chocolate for lunch (!)


Her body is so amazing I'm envious.



The problem is, by saying "my colleague's body is amazing" I'm sure many will interpret the statement as saying my colleague is sexy/physically attractive. How can I convey my meaning without that implication?







phrase-requests






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Mitch

52.5k15105220




52.5k15105220










asked Apr 8 at 1:27









AllureAllure

297135




297135








  • 6





    Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    2 days ago











  • @ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

    – Allure
    2 days ago











  • @Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    yesterday






  • 1





    @ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

    – Allure
    yesterday











  • @Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

    – Allure
    yesterday














  • 6





    Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    2 days ago











  • @ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

    – Allure
    2 days ago











  • @Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

    – Christoffer Hammarström
    yesterday






  • 1





    @ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

    – Allure
    yesterday











  • @Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

    – Allure
    yesterday








6




6





Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

– Christoffer Hammarström
2 days ago





Why is it important that you convey this message? What benefit are you hoping to gain from conveying this message? It seems like a big risk that you might get misinterpreted.

– Christoffer Hammarström
2 days ago













@ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

– Allure
2 days ago





@ChristofferHammarström I find that in general people like praise ... if her constitution being this amazing is because of something she is doing (as opposed to genes) then she will likely want to know.

– Allure
2 days ago













@Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

– Christoffer Hammarström
yesterday





@Allure: Doesn't seem worth the risk to you that she might "want to know" that her constitution is amazing. What great things do you expect she will accomplish with this newfound knowledge, ostensibly hitherto unbeknownst to her?

– Christoffer Hammarström
yesterday




1




1





@ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

– Allure
yesterday





@ChristofferHammarström she'll feel happy, and I'm happy that she feels happy as opposed to nothing, especially since making her feel happy doesn't cost me anything.

– Allure
yesterday













@Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

– Allure
yesterday





@Fattie workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/133599/…

– Allure
yesterday










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















74














Don't focus on her body.



Instead, say something like this:




I am envious of my colleague's constitution.

I wish I had my colleague's metabolism.




Both of the following definitions come from Merriam-Webster.



Constitution:




2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body

// a hearty constitution




Metabolism:




b : the sum of the processes by which a particular substance is handled in the living body






Or, if you do focus on her body, don't make it sound as if you're talking about her appearance.



You could instead say something like this:




I wish my body handled adverse conditions as well as my colleague's does.




Or simply:




I wish I had my colleague's health.







share|improve this answer



















  • 16





    +1 for constitution

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    Apr 8 at 2:42






  • 9





    "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

    – Aleksander
    2 days ago






  • 4





    would "stamina" work?

    – April
    2 days ago






  • 5





    @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago








  • 1





    I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

    – TimothyAWiseman
    2 days ago



















19














You are right that the word "body" in the first sentence might send the wrong message.



The simplest way to fix that is just say "My colleague is amazing". The following sentences then describe what is amazing about her.



In the last sentence, we already know why you think her body is amazing, so it will not be misunderstood, but you could change it to "Her metabolism is so amazing I'm envious" if you want to avoid any reference to physical attractiveness.






share|improve this answer



















  • 5





    +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

    – crw
    2 days ago











  • This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

    – Fattie
    yesterday



















6














There are some words that actually convey the meaning you intend. Here are some examples applied to this situation:




My colleague is remarkably resilient.




Resilient: Able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.




My colleague has an imperturbable disposition.




Imperturbable: Incapable of being upset, unflappable



Disposition: Physical inclination or tendency




My colleague is indefatigable.




Indefatigable: Literally, untiring. Figuratively, not affected, put off, or overwhelmed the way others might be.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

    – Fattie
    yesterday



















1














I would find the other suggestions awkward to say due to their "sophistication" or formality.



Here are some (mostly) simpler ideas. Many don't fully convey the meaning but of course could be qualified further in the conversation.



I think my pick would be X is bulletproof.




X is bulletproof/impervious/indestructible/invulnerable/invincible.



X is capable of withstanding anything.



Everything seems to bounce off X.



X is tough.



X is seemingly unstoppable.



X is hardy/robust/resilient.



X has a lot of grit.



X is really fit.



X can go for miles/run a marathon [without breaking a sweat].



Physically, X can deal with anything.




More colloquial:




X is a tank.



X is a machine.



X can really take a beating/pummelling.




This is not one I've heard before, but if I heard it I would have a pretty good idea of what it meant:




X has flesh of iron.




Which reminds me of the Iron Man/Iron Woman contest (this would depend on whether it is well-known in your locality).




X is practically an Iron Man/Iron Woman.




Here is a more sophisticated one:




X would put Achilles to shame.







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    protected by Mari-Lou A yesterday



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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    74














    Don't focus on her body.



    Instead, say something like this:




    I am envious of my colleague's constitution.

    I wish I had my colleague's metabolism.




    Both of the following definitions come from Merriam-Webster.



    Constitution:




    2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body

    // a hearty constitution




    Metabolism:




    b : the sum of the processes by which a particular substance is handled in the living body






    Or, if you do focus on her body, don't make it sound as if you're talking about her appearance.



    You could instead say something like this:




    I wish my body handled adverse conditions as well as my colleague's does.




    Or simply:




    I wish I had my colleague's health.







    share|improve this answer



















    • 16





      +1 for constitution

      – UnhandledExcepSean
      Apr 8 at 2:42






    • 9





      "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

      – Aleksander
      2 days ago






    • 4





      would "stamina" work?

      – April
      2 days ago






    • 5





      @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

      – Jason Bassford
      2 days ago








    • 1





      I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      2 days ago
















    74














    Don't focus on her body.



    Instead, say something like this:




    I am envious of my colleague's constitution.

    I wish I had my colleague's metabolism.




    Both of the following definitions come from Merriam-Webster.



    Constitution:




    2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body

    // a hearty constitution




    Metabolism:




    b : the sum of the processes by which a particular substance is handled in the living body






    Or, if you do focus on her body, don't make it sound as if you're talking about her appearance.



    You could instead say something like this:




    I wish my body handled adverse conditions as well as my colleague's does.




    Or simply:




    I wish I had my colleague's health.







    share|improve this answer



















    • 16





      +1 for constitution

      – UnhandledExcepSean
      Apr 8 at 2:42






    • 9





      "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

      – Aleksander
      2 days ago






    • 4





      would "stamina" work?

      – April
      2 days ago






    • 5





      @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

      – Jason Bassford
      2 days ago








    • 1





      I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      2 days ago














    74












    74








    74







    Don't focus on her body.



    Instead, say something like this:




    I am envious of my colleague's constitution.

    I wish I had my colleague's metabolism.




    Both of the following definitions come from Merriam-Webster.



    Constitution:




    2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body

    // a hearty constitution




    Metabolism:




    b : the sum of the processes by which a particular substance is handled in the living body






    Or, if you do focus on her body, don't make it sound as if you're talking about her appearance.



    You could instead say something like this:




    I wish my body handled adverse conditions as well as my colleague's does.




    Or simply:




    I wish I had my colleague's health.







    share|improve this answer













    Don't focus on her body.



    Instead, say something like this:




    I am envious of my colleague's constitution.

    I wish I had my colleague's metabolism.




    Both of the following definitions come from Merriam-Webster.



    Constitution:




    2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body

    // a hearty constitution




    Metabolism:




    b : the sum of the processes by which a particular substance is handled in the living body






    Or, if you do focus on her body, don't make it sound as if you're talking about her appearance.



    You could instead say something like this:




    I wish my body handled adverse conditions as well as my colleague's does.




    Or simply:




    I wish I had my colleague's health.








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 8 at 2:27









    Jason BassfordJason Bassford

    20.1k32648




    20.1k32648








    • 16





      +1 for constitution

      – UnhandledExcepSean
      Apr 8 at 2:42






    • 9





      "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

      – Aleksander
      2 days ago






    • 4





      would "stamina" work?

      – April
      2 days ago






    • 5





      @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

      – Jason Bassford
      2 days ago








    • 1





      I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      2 days ago














    • 16





      +1 for constitution

      – UnhandledExcepSean
      Apr 8 at 2:42






    • 9





      "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

      – Aleksander
      2 days ago






    • 4





      would "stamina" work?

      – April
      2 days ago






    • 5





      @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

      – Jason Bassford
      2 days ago








    • 1





      I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

      – TimothyAWiseman
      2 days ago








    16




    16





    +1 for constitution

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    Apr 8 at 2:42





    +1 for constitution

    – UnhandledExcepSean
    Apr 8 at 2:42




    9




    9





    "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

    – Aleksander
    2 days ago





    "I wish I had my colleague's health" would be easily misunderstood to mean that the speaker suffers from poor health.

    – Aleksander
    2 days ago




    4




    4





    would "stamina" work?

    – April
    2 days ago





    would "stamina" work?

    – April
    2 days ago




    5




    5





    @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago







    @April Yes, stamina is another word that would fit. As are resilience and powers of recovery.

    – Jason Bassford
    2 days ago






    1




    1





    I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

    – TimothyAWiseman
    2 days ago





    I agree with all of this, especially in the context of the request for a phrase, but I think the answer might be improved by mentioning that the best answer in actual life is likely to be to say nothing at all. Sometimes the best phrase for a situation is silence.

    – TimothyAWiseman
    2 days ago













    19














    You are right that the word "body" in the first sentence might send the wrong message.



    The simplest way to fix that is just say "My colleague is amazing". The following sentences then describe what is amazing about her.



    In the last sentence, we already know why you think her body is amazing, so it will not be misunderstood, but you could change it to "Her metabolism is so amazing I'm envious" if you want to avoid any reference to physical attractiveness.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 5





      +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

      – crw
      2 days ago











    • This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

      – Fattie
      yesterday
















    19














    You are right that the word "body" in the first sentence might send the wrong message.



    The simplest way to fix that is just say "My colleague is amazing". The following sentences then describe what is amazing about her.



    In the last sentence, we already know why you think her body is amazing, so it will not be misunderstood, but you could change it to "Her metabolism is so amazing I'm envious" if you want to avoid any reference to physical attractiveness.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 5





      +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

      – crw
      2 days ago











    • This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

      – Fattie
      yesterday














    19












    19








    19







    You are right that the word "body" in the first sentence might send the wrong message.



    The simplest way to fix that is just say "My colleague is amazing". The following sentences then describe what is amazing about her.



    In the last sentence, we already know why you think her body is amazing, so it will not be misunderstood, but you could change it to "Her metabolism is so amazing I'm envious" if you want to avoid any reference to physical attractiveness.






    share|improve this answer













    You are right that the word "body" in the first sentence might send the wrong message.



    The simplest way to fix that is just say "My colleague is amazing". The following sentences then describe what is amazing about her.



    In the last sentence, we already know why you think her body is amazing, so it will not be misunderstood, but you could change it to "Her metabolism is so amazing I'm envious" if you want to avoid any reference to physical attractiveness.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 2 days ago









    alephzeroalephzero

    3,65511117




    3,65511117








    • 5





      +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

      – crw
      2 days ago











    • This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

      – Fattie
      yesterday














    • 5





      +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

      – crw
      2 days ago











    • This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

      – Fattie
      yesterday








    5




    5





    +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

    – crw
    2 days ago





    +1 And variations on a theme, e.g. My colleague is superhuman.

    – crw
    2 days ago













    This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

    – Fattie
    yesterday





    This is just as bad, really. "X is amazing" has the common meaning that you're hot for her. Jason's is the correct answer.

    – Fattie
    yesterday











    6














    There are some words that actually convey the meaning you intend. Here are some examples applied to this situation:




    My colleague is remarkably resilient.




    Resilient: Able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.




    My colleague has an imperturbable disposition.




    Imperturbable: Incapable of being upset, unflappable



    Disposition: Physical inclination or tendency




    My colleague is indefatigable.




    Indefatigable: Literally, untiring. Figuratively, not affected, put off, or overwhelmed the way others might be.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

      – Fattie
      yesterday
















    6














    There are some words that actually convey the meaning you intend. Here are some examples applied to this situation:




    My colleague is remarkably resilient.




    Resilient: Able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.




    My colleague has an imperturbable disposition.




    Imperturbable: Incapable of being upset, unflappable



    Disposition: Physical inclination or tendency




    My colleague is indefatigable.




    Indefatigable: Literally, untiring. Figuratively, not affected, put off, or overwhelmed the way others might be.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

      – Fattie
      yesterday














    6












    6








    6







    There are some words that actually convey the meaning you intend. Here are some examples applied to this situation:




    My colleague is remarkably resilient.




    Resilient: Able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.




    My colleague has an imperturbable disposition.




    Imperturbable: Incapable of being upset, unflappable



    Disposition: Physical inclination or tendency




    My colleague is indefatigable.




    Indefatigable: Literally, untiring. Figuratively, not affected, put off, or overwhelmed the way others might be.






    share|improve this answer













    There are some words that actually convey the meaning you intend. Here are some examples applied to this situation:




    My colleague is remarkably resilient.




    Resilient: Able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.




    My colleague has an imperturbable disposition.




    Imperturbable: Incapable of being upset, unflappable



    Disposition: Physical inclination or tendency




    My colleague is indefatigable.




    Indefatigable: Literally, untiring. Figuratively, not affected, put off, or overwhelmed the way others might be.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 2 days ago









    Canis LupusCanis Lupus

    21k13374




    21k13374








    • 2





      If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

      – Fattie
      yesterday














    • 2





      If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

      – Fattie
      yesterday








    2




    2





    If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

    – Fattie
    yesterday





    If only we lived in a world where people had vocabulary like this.

    – Fattie
    yesterday











    1














    I would find the other suggestions awkward to say due to their "sophistication" or formality.



    Here are some (mostly) simpler ideas. Many don't fully convey the meaning but of course could be qualified further in the conversation.



    I think my pick would be X is bulletproof.




    X is bulletproof/impervious/indestructible/invulnerable/invincible.



    X is capable of withstanding anything.



    Everything seems to bounce off X.



    X is tough.



    X is seemingly unstoppable.



    X is hardy/robust/resilient.



    X has a lot of grit.



    X is really fit.



    X can go for miles/run a marathon [without breaking a sweat].



    Physically, X can deal with anything.




    More colloquial:




    X is a tank.



    X is a machine.



    X can really take a beating/pummelling.




    This is not one I've heard before, but if I heard it I would have a pretty good idea of what it meant:




    X has flesh of iron.




    Which reminds me of the Iron Man/Iron Woman contest (this would depend on whether it is well-known in your locality).




    X is practically an Iron Man/Iron Woman.




    Here is a more sophisticated one:




    X would put Achilles to shame.







    share|improve this answer




























      1














      I would find the other suggestions awkward to say due to their "sophistication" or formality.



      Here are some (mostly) simpler ideas. Many don't fully convey the meaning but of course could be qualified further in the conversation.



      I think my pick would be X is bulletproof.




      X is bulletproof/impervious/indestructible/invulnerable/invincible.



      X is capable of withstanding anything.



      Everything seems to bounce off X.



      X is tough.



      X is seemingly unstoppable.



      X is hardy/robust/resilient.



      X has a lot of grit.



      X is really fit.



      X can go for miles/run a marathon [without breaking a sweat].



      Physically, X can deal with anything.




      More colloquial:




      X is a tank.



      X is a machine.



      X can really take a beating/pummelling.




      This is not one I've heard before, but if I heard it I would have a pretty good idea of what it meant:




      X has flesh of iron.




      Which reminds me of the Iron Man/Iron Woman contest (this would depend on whether it is well-known in your locality).




      X is practically an Iron Man/Iron Woman.




      Here is a more sophisticated one:




      X would put Achilles to shame.







      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        I would find the other suggestions awkward to say due to their "sophistication" or formality.



        Here are some (mostly) simpler ideas. Many don't fully convey the meaning but of course could be qualified further in the conversation.



        I think my pick would be X is bulletproof.




        X is bulletproof/impervious/indestructible/invulnerable/invincible.



        X is capable of withstanding anything.



        Everything seems to bounce off X.



        X is tough.



        X is seemingly unstoppable.



        X is hardy/robust/resilient.



        X has a lot of grit.



        X is really fit.



        X can go for miles/run a marathon [without breaking a sweat].



        Physically, X can deal with anything.




        More colloquial:




        X is a tank.



        X is a machine.



        X can really take a beating/pummelling.




        This is not one I've heard before, but if I heard it I would have a pretty good idea of what it meant:




        X has flesh of iron.




        Which reminds me of the Iron Man/Iron Woman contest (this would depend on whether it is well-known in your locality).




        X is practically an Iron Man/Iron Woman.




        Here is a more sophisticated one:




        X would put Achilles to shame.







        share|improve this answer













        I would find the other suggestions awkward to say due to their "sophistication" or formality.



        Here are some (mostly) simpler ideas. Many don't fully convey the meaning but of course could be qualified further in the conversation.



        I think my pick would be X is bulletproof.




        X is bulletproof/impervious/indestructible/invulnerable/invincible.



        X is capable of withstanding anything.



        Everything seems to bounce off X.



        X is tough.



        X is seemingly unstoppable.



        X is hardy/robust/resilient.



        X has a lot of grit.



        X is really fit.



        X can go for miles/run a marathon [without breaking a sweat].



        Physically, X can deal with anything.




        More colloquial:




        X is a tank.



        X is a machine.



        X can really take a beating/pummelling.




        This is not one I've heard before, but if I heard it I would have a pretty good idea of what it meant:




        X has flesh of iron.




        Which reminds me of the Iron Man/Iron Woman contest (this would depend on whether it is well-known in your locality).




        X is practically an Iron Man/Iron Woman.




        Here is a more sophisticated one:




        X would put Achilles to shame.








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        ArteliusArtelius

        26113




        26113

















            protected by Mari-Lou A yesterday



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