Eituhottavia
Eituhottavia is a Finnish neologism that is used to describe things that cannot be destroyed or cannot be easily destroyed. The term is formed from the prefix ei- meaning not, the root tuho- relating to destruction, and the participial suffix -ttava, with the plural form eituhottavia often used when referring to multiple objects or concepts. In practical use, eituhottavia serves as a descriptive label for materials, ideas, or systems that are considered highly resistant to destruction or irreversible damage, at least within a given fictional, theoretical, or rhetorical context.
Etymology and linguistic notes emphasize that eituhottavia derives from tuho- (destruction) and the common Finnish constructive
Usage and reception: eituhottavia appears most often in discussions about resilience, durability, and the ethics of
See also: indestructible, durability, resilience, metafiction, speculative fiction.