indissoluble

ADJECTIVE
  1. used of decisions and contracts
  2. (of a substance) incapable of being dissolved
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How To Use indissoluble In A Sentence

  • So these are the ties that we have, and they're indissoluble.
  • It was to bring together in indissoluble union a variety of differing regions who would never consent to union without some protections of their own autonomy.
  • In a nutshell, interpretative expansion of the patient's capacity for reflective awareness of old, repetitive organizing principles occurs concomitantly with the emotional impact and meanings of ongoing relational experiences with the therapist, and both are indissoluble components of a unitary therapeutic process that establishes the possibility of alternative principles for organizing experience, whereby the patient's emotional horizons can become widened, enriched, more flexible and more complex. Robert D. Stolorow: What Is Character and How Does it Change?
  • The Western audience sensed in him the organic, indissoluble tie with European culture.
  • The Roman Catholic Church regards marriage as indissoluble.
  • Couples were invited to renew their wedding vows and the Pope reaffirmed that the Christian marriage was indissoluble.
  • Movie, from the very beginning of its origin , has an indissoluble bond with painiing.
  • They are the two sides of the one coin, and their indissoluble union does much to explain the enduring appeal of his work.
  • It is neither an amalgam of cultures nor a mix of coexisting, indissoluble elements.
  • Now, idea, taken in indissoluble connection with this 'analogon' of product is mind, that which knows itself, and the existence of which may be inferred, but cannot appear or become a Literary Remains, Volume 2
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