inviolable in English

adjective
1
never to be broken, infringed, or dishonored.
an inviolable rule of chastity

Use "inviolable" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "inviolable" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "inviolable", or refer to the context using the word "inviolable" in the English Dictionary.

1. This was an inviolable rule.

2. The people possess inviolable rights.

3. Home ( s ) of citizens are inviolable.

4. Article 12 Socialist public property is inviolable.

5. Socialist public property is sacred and inviolable.

6. The person of the king is inviolable.

7. She seemed possessed of an inviolable grace.

8. Article Socialist public property is sacred and inviolable.

9. Yesterday's resolution says the present Polish border is "inviolable".

10. Human dignity inviolable. It must be respected and protected.

11. Its first article declares that " human dignity shall be inviolable "

12. Article The archives and documents of the mission shall be inviolable.

13. His marriage to this parish was inviolable in its own sacred vows.

14. Everyone has an inviolable right to protection by a fair legal system.

15. China's territorial land, inland waters, territorial seas and territorial airspace are inviolable.

16. Freedom of action is one of the inviolable rules of human behavior.

17. The monarchy was also made "sacred and inviolable", in contrast to the temporary charter.

18. The game had a single inviolable rule: obstacles were to be overcome, not circumvented.

19. It is an inviolable mission of the entire Chinese people to reunify the motherland.

20. It read: The privacy of correspondence, postal, telegraphic and telephonic communications shall be inviolable.

21. Foster's set of negatives is a concise deconstruction of areas once considered inviolable.

22. And through all this welter of change and development your mission remains fixed, determined, inviolable.

23. An inviolable refuge, as formerly for criminals and debtors; sanctuary: He sought Asylum in the church.

24. Like my country, I too have spread myself to the invader, while remaining secretly inviolable.

25. Asylum definition is - an inviolable place of refuge and protection giving shelter to criminals and debtors : sanctuary

26. In our society, however, children are held in theory at least to be sexually sacrosanct and inviolable.

27. What a man experiences in the privacy of his psyche must of necessity remain inviolate and inviolable.

28. The inviolable Gedge formed character traits as a child that give a fascinating insight into his later life.

29. A state, he said, could become rich in no. other wise than by maintaining an inviolable respect for the right of property.

30. 13 It seems that for some sufferers hypochondria is a way of guaranteeing inviolable privacy; consider Proust laboring in his cork-lined room.

31. Bouillabaisse The secrets to making an authentic Bouillabaisse are few, but inviolable—use a good variety of fish, and a good fish stock

32. In the modern society of rule of law, the property right,(Sentencedict) especially the ownership of immovable property is the sacred and inviolable right that is guaranteed in the constitutional law.

33. Areas of isolated virgin forest, recently considered inviolable by human disturbance, now are the locales of extensive lumbering, mineral prospecting and mammoth copper mining projects that pollute the adjacent rivers.

34. A Blasphemy law is a law prohibiting Blasphemy, where Blasphemy is the act of insulting or showing contempt or lack of reverence to a deity, or sacred things, or toward something considered sacred or inviolable

35. Bast (sanctuary, asylum), the designation of cer­tain sanctuaries in Iran that are considered inviolable and were often used by people seeking refuge (Bast nešastan, Bast-nešīnī)from prosecution (even common criminals), called Bastīs.The word is probably derived from OIr

36. The declaration also stated that Latvia would base its relationship with the Soviet Union on the basis of the Latvian–Soviet Peace Treaty of 1920, in which the Soviet Union recognized Latvia's independence as inviolable "for all future time".

37. Vasquez suggested the queer/gay Assimilationist split “is a rift between those who want to be normal at any cost and those of us who believe gay liberation (and therefore reproductive rights) is a central and inviolable tenet of our struggle for freedom.”11 The idea of normal sexuality implies a culture of privilege that guarantees social

38. The juridical principle of the fidei commissum that Paul has enunciated in Gal 3:15 makes the testament inviolable: "No one Annuls or adds a codicil to a testament ([TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII.]) ratified by a human being." The precedence of that testament, however, is challenged by the Sinai covenant and its attendant giving of the Law.

39. We know that the disabled person - a unique and unrepeatable person in his equal and inviolable dignity - needs not only care, but first of all love which becomes recognition, respect and integration: from birth to adolescence, to adulthood and to the delicate moment, faced with trepidation by so many parents, of separation from their children, the moment of "after us".

40. Asylum (n.) early 15c., earlier asile (late 14c.), "place of refuge, sanctuary," from Latin Asylum "sanctuary," from Greek asylon "refuge, fenced territory," noun use of neuter of asylos "inviolable, safe from violence," especially of persons seeking protection, from a-"without" (see a-(3)) + syl ē "right of seizure," which is of unknown etymology