Now if any one, paraphrasing the fore-cited passages, would have them expressed in more familiar terms, the description in Phaedrus may be thus explained: That Fate is a divine sentence, intransgressible since its cause cannot be divested or hindered. From Wordnik.com. [Essays and Miscellanies] Reference
Finally, there is a systemic benefit to a fixed and intransgressible bias in favor of innocence because it encourages those who wish to increase the number of punished guilty parties to reach that result by improving the reliability of the process, rather than taking the shortcut of shifting the standards. From Wordnik.com. [The Volokh Conspiracy » Is the Sixth Now the “Most Reversed” Circuit?] Reference
I also view him as the end and intransgressible term of all things. From Wordnik.com. [History of the Conflict Between Religion and Science] Reference
Today, partly as a result of the shocked reactions to the crimes perpetrated during World War II, fundamental and intransgressible rules and principles of international law, including of human rights and humanitarian law, directed to the protection of the essential values and interests of the international community as a whole, now provide the foundations of contemporary international society. From Wordnik.com. [AGORAVOX - The Citizen Media] Reference
"intransgressible". From Wordnik.com. [IntelliBriefs] Reference
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