An infrangible series. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
infrangible human rights. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
Adjective : infrangible moral strength. ,an infrangible rule. From Dictionary.com.
That is an infrangible prerequisite for any agreement. From Wordnik.com. [OpEdNews - Diary: The progressive route to compromise] Reference
The black tower reared out of the mist so suddenly that his first realization of its presence was to scrape his palms -instinctively flung forward-against its cold infrangible scales. From Wordnik.com. [She Closed Her Eyes] Reference
Athens has, constantly and officially, supported FYROM's EU perspective (4), but with the infrangible prerequisite that there will be a commonly accepted solution to the naming-dispute. From Wordnik.com. [Time's Up for "Macedonian" Perverse Nationalism] Reference
Then, later, on leaving the party and in defending the cause of intervention, he had come to oppose the illusory fancies of proletarian internationalism with an assertion of the infrangible integrity, not only moral but economic as well, of the national organism, affirming therefore the sanctity of country for the working classes as for other classes. From Wordnik.com. [Readings on Fascism and National Socialism Selected by members of the department of philosophy, University of Colorado] Reference
He liked this harsh country, these harsh, infrangible people that it bred. From Wordnik.com. [The Judge] Reference
This is how the enchantment, which was apparently so infrangible, was broken. From Wordnik.com. [Selected Writings of Guy De Maupassant] Reference
When you let citizenry know about Exposed Office citizenry have two reactions, infrangible joy or verbalize disbelief. From Wordnik.com. [We Blog A Lot] Reference
How could any innocent youth resign such a fund of fun freely bestowed and confirmed by the, at that day, infrangible word of. From Wordnik.com. [Recollections and reflections : an auto of half a century and more,] Reference
But aloft, one of its supportable toshiba 1.73 ghz may be macrencephalic out redistributed infrangible encolure in lethal cupel. From Wordnik.com. [Rational Review] Reference
True, his heart did not break, because it was made of infrangible material, and his disappointment was counter-balanced by a certain vague relief. From Wordnik.com. [The Angel of Terror] Reference
The upward look and the sigh were surely the outward expression of the infrangible link which bound both the Lord and the man to the Father of all. From Wordnik.com. [Miracles of Our Lord] Reference
It had happened every time, every time; so invariably as to prove that for Nina virginity was the sacred, the infrangible, predestined law, the one condition. From Wordnik.com. [The Creators A Comedy] Reference
The logic was perfect, and it seemed but another link in the infrangible chain of events, when she found another letter waiting for her at the office of the Synthesis. From Wordnik.com. [The Coast of Bohemia] Reference
It moves you more than any of those uniformed or cloaked images of warriors and statesmen, and it speaks more eloquently of the infrangible continuity, the unbroken greatness of. From Wordnik.com. [London Films] Reference
It would be far better to favor its indulgence, in the hope that the love of her child would, like an elastic but infrangible cord, gradually tame her down to a more settled life. From Wordnik.com. [The Vicar's Daughter] Reference
Shall the finest intellects, the most genial spirits of our State, bound by the infrangible fetters of habit, be doomed to perish in a drunkard's grave and the State have no care for them?. From Wordnik.com. [First Annual Report of the Board of Public Charities of North Carolina. February, 1870] Reference
"Nor until their vocabulary of maledictions was nearly run through, did they quit the cavalier, whom they left environed with massy bars, infrangible to the desperate utmost of human force.". From Wordnik.com. [Romance Readers and Romance Writers: a Satirical Novel] Reference
My stroll through the children's toy store has shown that not only is Hannah Arendt's 'banality of evil' perhaps more infrangible than ever before, but that the 'banality of evil' now wears a jejune mask with a smile. From Wordnik.com. [Thomas Paine's Corner] Reference
This great progress, not the less actual for being hereditary and ancient, was followed by an infinite variety of details which prove that the industry, and even the policy, of the hive have not crystallised into infrangible formulae. From Wordnik.com. [The Life of the Bee] Reference
The prayer of the kneeling absurdity was to him an audacious mockery of the infrangible laws of Nature: this hulk of misshapen pottery actually presuming to believe that an invisible individual heard what he said because he crooked his hinges to say it!. From Wordnik.com. [Thomas Wingfold, Curate V3] Reference
It did not occur to George that the infrangible laws of Nature she had herself from the very first so agonizingly broken to the poor dwarf, she had been to him such a cruel step-mother, that he was in evil case indeed if he could find no father to give him fair play and a chance of the endurable. From Wordnik.com. [Thomas Wingfold, Curate V3] Reference
And this consciousness of being fettered by insensible and infrangible bonds, this need of doing something with nothing tangible in the reach of the outstretched hand, so worked upon my mind, that it naturally sought relief, as often as the elemental strife arose, by mingling unconstrained with the tumult of the night. From Wordnik.com. [Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood] Reference
More than contented, therefore, while busily his father wedded welt and sole with stitches infrangible, Gibbie sat on the floor, preparing waxed ends, carefully sticking in the hog's bristle, and rolling the combination, with quite professional aptitude, between the flat of his hand and what of trouser-leg he had left, gazing eagerly between at the advancing masterpiece. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Gibbie] Reference
The sailor sees only high, black, jagged, and desolate rocks, rising perpendicularly from the sea, and every where washed by a tremendous surf, prohibiting all attempts to land except at the single point of St. James: his eye vainly seeks round the adamant wall, the relief of one sprig of green; not a trace of vegetation appears, and Nature herself seems to have destined the spot for a gloomy and infrangible prison. From Wordnik.com. [A New Voyage Round the World, in the years 1823, 24, 25, and 26, Vol. 2] Reference
The present organization of private property with no restrictions upon the right of inheritance by descent or upon personal accumulation; the ever increasing and more perfect application of scientific discoveries to the facilitation of human labor -- the labor of adapting the materials furnished by Nature to human needs; the telegraph and the steam-engine, the constantly overflowing torrent of human migrations -- all these bind, with invisible but infrangible threads, the existence of a family of peasants, work-people or petty trades-people to the life of the whole world. From Wordnik.com. [Socialism and Modern Science (Darwin, Spencer, Marx)] Reference
In adamantine bonds infrangible. From Wordnik.com. [Prometheus Bound] Reference
Rib, an infrangible one. From Wordnik.com. [The Complete Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell] Reference
In funder brake their bands infrangible. From Wordnik.com. [The Process and Empire of Christ: From His Birth to the End of the Mediatorial Kingdom; a Poem ...] Reference
Their branches, infrangible. From Wordnik.com. [Studies in Song] Reference
A rib of his infrangible, 90. From Wordnik.com. [The Biglow Papers] Reference
infrangible. From Wordnik.com. [Thomas Paine's Corner] Reference
Rib, an infrangible one, 90. From Wordnik.com. [The Biglow Papers] Reference
From king to king, from cardinal to cardinal, from the earliest in date of subject to the latest of his histories, we find the same thread running, the same link of honourable and righteous judgment, of equitable and careful equanimity, connecting and combining play with play in an unbroken and infrangible chain of evidence to the singleness of the poet's eye, the identity of the workman's hand, which could do justice and would do no more than justice, alike to Henry and to Wolsey, to Pandulph and to John. From Wordnik.com. [A Study of Shakespeare] Reference
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