How To Use Incontestable In A Sentence

  • He added that they were within their rights to do so because they have an "incontestable" registered trademark. EphBlog
  • Although provincial acting is not of the high class which conceals the art, this man's look beside him and behind him at vacant seats had incontestable evidence in support of his declaration, that the lady and gentleman had gone on by themselves: the phaeton was a box of flown birds. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • Some courts treat incontestability as creating a rebuttable presumption of strength, but the analysis should be separate: “there is no apparent reason that the incontestable status of a mark should automatically translate into a well-known mark.” Archive 2009-04-01
  • Cultural studies also underestimate the importance of racism which is an incontestable fact in the lives of many black people.
  • Together, the president and vice-president (or just ‘the presidency’) would be able to act without fear or favour, and would possess an incontestable mandate.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • Incontestable clause astrict the insurer's right based on strict obligations to disclose, to protect the policy holder's legitimate interests based on expectation and trust.
  • Now, there are some interesting restrictions on English reduplication, but the plain fact of it is incontestable (at least in every North American dialect I've ever come across).
  • His failure to take consistent foreign policy positions, though more recent, is incontestable.
  • It is unequivocal and incontestable, and what has happened?
  • I'm the new owner of this house, with clear and incontestable title.
  • Square one -- in all its recalcitrant glory -- belligerent and incontestable. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • If the amount of these matches is divisible by a certain number, such as 7 (which is said to be God's number), there is an incontestable argument that the Spirit of God is ever present in the text.
  • Incontestable clause astrict the insurer's right based on strict obligations to disclose, to protect the policy holder's legitimate interests based on expectation and trust.
  • I take my stand, therefore, upon this incontestable fact, that the man of leisure becomes daily more reluctant to undergo fatigue, that he eagerly seeks for what he calls the comfortable, that is to say for every means of sparing himself the play and the waste of the organs. Glorifying terrorism
  • There are certain incontestable themes in his work.
  • The proof was incontestable – he had no choice but to admit defeat and plead guilty.
  • Complete is a surrogate superlative, the latest tactic, a piece of discursive dexterity in the sometimes tedious Messi or Ronaldo debate -- presented like it was some kind of incontestable fact. SI.com
  • The plaintiffs are claiming the the Bush Administration is ignoring "incontestable" evidence of global warming by instituting more stringent carbon emissions on power companies generating plants. NewsBusters.org - Exposing Liberal Media Bias
  • Dispute the numbers, but the big picture is incontestable.
  • Does that not amount to the Minister making a conclusive and incontestable decision about a matter of law?
  • The Press Complaints Commission rules were scrupulously observed; the only minor shown had his face obscured; and the story was of incontestable public interest.
  • Four days ago Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari recalled the incontestable fact that "The terrorists of today were the heroes of yesteryear until 9/11 occurred .... AfterDowningStreet.org - Bush-Cheney Trials in '09
  • 'It may not be at present a question of much interest to the British public, because no such large decisive experiment as was proposed has yet been tried as to the value and attainableness of the object; but its magnitude and importance are incontestable, the whole extent of peat soil in Ireland exceeding, as it is confidently pronounced, Richard Lovell Edgeworth
  • Where exactly these sites are located on the stage is seldom clear, though it does seem incontestable that, while they are associated morally with darkness and vice and sometimes physically with sunlessness, they can only serve their purpose if they are clearly visible to the audience.
  • Peter Holder, 44, confessed to the attempted rape in the face of "incontestable" DNA evidence. Getreading - Reading Post - RSS feed
  • And I also think it is incontestable that Protestantism has been an overwhelming influence in creating the modern world.
  • To this tradition, he counterposes an alternative way of understanding the past - as that which we can ‘feel behind us as an incontestable acquisition’.
  • Sounds came at length -- harsh and startling; -- the unmistakable note of the jezail; answering shots from his own men; -- proofs incontestable that a sharp engagement was in progress up above. Captain Desmond, V.C.
  • Now, there are some interesting restrictions on English reduplication, but the plain fact of it is incontestable (at least in every North American dialect I've ever come across).
  • Besides this diplomatical dignitary and his wife, we had two American gentlemen of more than average intelligence, who related wonderful things of the 'spiritual manifestations' (so called), incontestable things, inexplicable things. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning
  • Notice that, for him, it's just a fact, entirely incontestable, that there's no evidence againstthe Standard Narrative of 9/11; and so he doesn't even think of actually contending withthe evidence, but urges that it be "debunked" covertly -- and pre-emptively, so that thepublic never gets to hear about it, and discuss it for themselves. Obama's Info Chief advocates Disinformation and Domestic Covert Ops
  • The show's creator, Marc Cherry, appeared to admit one of the incontestable truths about TV — "The only thing harder than creating a hit show is knowing when to end it" — saying he was afraid the show would "drift away into nothing" if allowed to continue indefinitely. Critic's TCA Notebook: That's a Wrap
  • But it's incontestable that if it was improved, people would stay longer and spend more money.
  • The proposition is incontestable yet incompletely enounced.
  • incontestable" second position and was the only "threat" to complete power domination by the ANC. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The rationale for the government's proposed change, however, is incontestable.
  • Square one -- in all its recalcitrant glory -- belligerent and incontestable. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • We had incontestable proof of her innocence.
  • Its benefits have been so incontestable that in the five millennia since the advent of the written word numerous poets and writers have extolled its virtues.
  • Some courts treat incontestability as creating a rebuttable presumption of strength, but the analysis should be separate: "there is no apparent reason that the incontestable status of a mark should automatically translate into a well-known mark. Rebecca Tushnet's 43(B)log
  • Every thing concurred to signalize this, that God's name (that is, his incontestable sovereignty, his irresistible power, and his inflexible justice) might be declared throughout all the earth, not only to all places, but through all ages while the earth remains. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume I (Genesis to Deuteronomy)
  • Regardless of whether you believe global warming to be a threat to the survival of humanity or simply the product of another wave in the world's oscillating climate, the problem of pollution remains incontestable.
  • Some courts treat incontestability as creating a rebuttable presumption of strength, but the analysis should be separate: “there is no apparent reason that the incontestable status of a mark should automatically translate into a well-known mark.” Archive 2009-04-01
  • This much is incontestable - in the last decade (I won't go further back) we have seen the emergence in Ireland of what Ms Flynn rightly described as a ‘tabloid culture’.
  • The combined assault of the Liberals and the Socialists upon "clericalism" fell flat, and against the Government's contention that the extraordinary and incontestable prosperity of the country merited a continuance of The Governments of Europe
  • Yet, my belief remained firm and incontestable about the pertinence of the idiom ‘Honesty is the best policy’.
  • (Though I think this is a descriptive/nominative use, there is arguably a doctrinal reason to stick with descriptiveness: some of LEYE’s marks are incontestable and nominative fair use is not a specifically listed defense to incontestability; however, courts have used nominative fair use to find no confusion as a matter of law, so that’s not a huge barrier to applying the doctrine to incontestable marks.) Archive 2009-08-01
  • If argument did not deliver incontestable conclusions, where was one to go?
  • He is wrong in believing that what is contestable is ‘knowledge’, and in failing to acknowledge that much knowledge is incontestable.
  • However much we are forced to recognize that reformism sometimes manifests itself as a sane rebellion against the apriorism of orthodox Marxist dogma, and as a scientific reaction against the phraseology of pseudorevolutionary stump-orators, it is nevertheless incontestable that reformism has a logical and causal connection with the insipid and blasé sociolism and with the decadent tendencies which are so plainly manifest in a large section of the modern bourgeois literary world. Political Parties; a Sociological Study of the Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern Democracy
  • Nevertheless, that soccer as a global phenomenon has yet to eradicate what was once called ‘The English Disease’ remains incontestable.
  • They were all going down together, into the dark… Just as soon as enough major players decided to contest the incontestable, and put the simulations to the audit of war.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy