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How To Use Inseparable In A Sentence

  • Europe was last united in neolithic times, before the inseparable meshwork of land, people, community and trade separated into hierarchy, nations and cities.
  • Kij: Nice to see Dream-Quest receive such prominence with that fantastic Gervasio Gallardo cover, inseparable from the contents thanks to childhood associations very similar to yours. MIND MELD: Books That Hold Special Places in Our Hearts and On Our Shelves
  • In fact, the history of the Church demonstrates that praxis is not only inseparable from, but actually flows out of didache or teaching. Archive 2008-07-13
  • The fragrance evoked an aroma of fruits and flowers so ripe, they are starting to decay, reminding us of Thanatos, which is forever inseparable from Eros. Archive 2007-07-01
  • But he has spent decades implanting the idea that he is an icon of his people and the two are inseparable.
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  • This realism remains inseparable from humanism, from a persistently innocent representation.
  • Miriam follows her even after she covers herself in gas and stalks away, and after that they are inseparable, Miriam having promised herself that she will never leave Eunice.
  • That the two were now inseparable? The Crossing-Place
  • The pair were inseparable from birth and often used to play tricks on their various sets of foster parents who could never tell them apart.
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • Therefore, rearmament is the foundation of and an inseparable condition of any foreign policy a British Government can follow. Europe 1937 Prospect and Retrospect
  • Unemployment and inner city decay are inseparable issues which must be tackled together.
  • Qinglian temple construction, is the founder of Pure Land Buddhist monk Huiyuan activities here inseparable.
  • If we keep this mighty nation one and inseparable, we shall have answered it forever; if not, why then those who revile man as vile and irreclaimably degraded may raise their pæans of triumph; the black spectres of antique tyrants may clap their hands gleefully in the land of accursed shadows, and hell hold high carnival, for, verily, it would seem as if they had triumphed, and that hope were a lie. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 1, No. 2, February, 1862 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • However, despite being inseparable during high school, Enid and Rebecca begin to drift apart as their maturing life goals take them in different directions.
  • When mom gets jailed indefinitely for drugs, the uncle and kid, forced to be roomies, adjust uneasily to each other's lifestyle, come to understand one another, and finally become inseparable.
  • Smith tells us that Quin and Hayman were inseparable friends, and so convival, that they seldom parted till daylight. All About Coffee
  • But if you see black identity as you see southern identity, or Irish identity, or Italian identity — not as a separate trunk, but as a branch of the American tree, with roots in the broader experience — then you understand that the particulars of black culture are inseparable from the particulars of the country. American Girl
  • I met up with him on the beach after the incident and we've been inseparable ever since.
  • And it is central as well to (and perhaps inseparable from) the question of genre.
  • What can foreknow is, national network TV station and CCTV net will be inseparable.
  • By the end of our second day at Columbia Lake, my roommates and I had met our neighbours from next door, and we've been inseparable ever since.
  • Oh, Fernand; this may not be; and thou canst purchase the power to bestow unperishing youth, unchanging beauty upon me; the power, moreover, to transport us hence, and render us happy in inseparable companionship for long, long years to come. Wagner, the Wehr-Wolf
  • According to Jewish and Christian religious traditions, sex and procreation were meant to be inseparable.
  • Astronomy was, under these circumstances, inseparable from astrolatry, and anathemas of the prophets were not carelessly uttered. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • Thereafter they were inseparable, despite the wicked stepmother status accorded by her stepchildren. Times, Sunday Times
  • In some languages the speaker thinks of himself and his completed action as inseparable, as a single idea, as the Latin _edi_ for I have eaten; in others he thinks of himself subconsciously as possessing the results of his action, as our _I have eaten_; and in others, as among the Irish peasantry, he separates himself and his action entirely, as _I am after eating_. Commentary Upon the Maya-Tzental Perez Codex with a Concluding Note Upon the Linguistic Problem of the Maya Glyphs
  • The life of the mind was inseparable from the notions of piety and prayer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Besides, to Adam, the conception of the future was so inseparable from the painful image of his father that the fear of any fatal accident to him was excluded by the deeply infixed fear of his continual degradation. Adam Bede
  • Lin and Lydie, though they'd had a strong relationship from the beginning, grew so close they were practically inseparable.
  • The pair were inseparable, yet in recent years their relationship has become strained. The Sun
  • But it avails little if we reach agreement on this doctrine or that but are in fundamental disagreement about the sacramental nature of the Church in inseparable unity with Christ and the salvation he bestows.
  • Moreover, in true Yorkshire speech, the accent is inseparable from the dialect - though not many would be willing to practise the dialect today, even if they were familiar with the phraseology.
  • Esoteric astrology has its roots in the philosophy of hylozoism, which asserts that life and matter are inseparable.
  • Today, literary style is often inseparable from self-advertising, and ends up as a knowing technique which processes and imprints everything which it comes into contact.
  • And because they are essential and inseparable rights, it follows necessarily that in whatsoever words any of them seem to be granted away, yet if the sovereign power itself be not in direct terms renounced and the name of sovereign no more given by the grantees to him that grants them, the grant is void: for when he has granted all he can, if we grant back the sovereignty, all is restored, as inseparably annexed thereunto. Leviathan
  • Bribery is almost inseparable from the business. Times, Sunday Times
  • Inseparable accidents are those which — although we know of no connexion between them and the attributes constitutive of the species, and although, therefore, so far as we are aware, they might be absent without making the name inapplicable and the species a different species — are yet never in fact known to be absent. A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive (Vol. 1 of 2)
  • To prove his courage, he told her of his present way of life; Louise had known nothing of its hardships, for there is an indefinable pudency inseparable from strong feeling in youth, a delicacy which shrinks from a display of great qualities; and a young man loves to have the real quality of his nature discerned through the incognito. Two Poets
  • In particular he denounced those who employed the word Theotokos, though he was ready to admit the use of it in a certain sense: "Ferri tamen potest hoc vocabulum proper ipsum considerationem, quod solum nominetur de virgine hoc verbum hoc propter inseparable templum Dei Verbi ex ipsa, non quia mater sit Dei Verbi; nemo enim antiquiorem se parit. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • These systems are inseparable and intrinsic to the problem of designing a school.
  • Or, as he also puts it, ‘the urge to tell [movie] stories is inseparable from the wish to make money.’
  • It is the inseparable and inextricable nature of the bond between the skeleton and death which ensures that human bones are often perceived in a supernatural light that passes beyond common sense.
  • In this work at least, the two are inseparable. The Times Literary Supplement
  • ‘Defence of civil liberty and justice for all our community are not mutually exclusive but inseparable,’ he told conference delegates.
  • The two women had managed to coexist for a month now, and despite their differences, were inseparable friends.
  • Respite comes, as one might expect with Dickens, in equally phonemic terms, floated upon (in that same paragraph) the sibilant, assonant, and iambic bonding of "inseparable and blessed" to describe the union of the title figure and Arthur Clennam, the man whose fetishistic vision of her impoverishment has seen her until now as a Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
  • I would like to say rearmament is not a policy in itself but it is the inseparable condition, in my opinion, of any foreign policy. Europe 1937 Prospect and Retrospect
  • Crime and freedom are inseparable. You can't have one without the other.
  • This work is inseparable from the grainy, vivid texture of 16 mm.
  • He firmly believes liberty is inseparable from social justice.
  • Sadness converges into "Sweet," and the plaintive note of longing in the voice of the suppliant is inseparable from the persistent imperative in the reiterated "Be thou. Shelley's Golden Wind: Zen Harmonics in _A Defence of Poetry_ and 'Ode to the WestWind'
  • They became closer and closer till they were practically inseparable.
  • Globalization really exists objectively, but the objectivity is inseparable from the ideological strategy of neoliberalism.
  • Obviously, this cognitive impairment is closely allied to and inseparable from emotional and relational difficulties. Eating Problems: A Feminist Psychoanalytic Treatment Model
  • First, the gospel exists essentially as an interpretation of Israel's Scriptures, and therefore is strictly inseparable from them.
  • A better understanding of technology would instead assume that we are ultimately inseparable from the tools we use. Adam Elkus: Beyond Twitter Revolutions and False Choices
  • One source said: 'They were virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • You have these persons, then, linked together in such manner, as will render them perfectly inseparable in these various stock transactions; having dealt for some little time; having bought and having sold; having this tremendous balance, this world of Stock, under which they were, on the Saturday evening, bending and groaning, on the Monday morning they had disburthened themselves completely of this with a profit of a little more than ten thousand pounds. The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane, commonly called Lord Cochrane, the Hon. Andrew Cochrane Johnstone, Richard Gathorne Butt, Ralph Sandom, Alexander M'Rae, John Peter Holloway, and Henry Lyte for A Conspiracy In the Court of
  • The most important of these results consisted in this, that the electromotive force produced in a "shunt-wound machine," as it was called, increased with the external resistance, whereby the great fluctuations formerly inseparable from electric arc lighting could be obviated, and thus, by the double means of exciting the electro-magnets, still greater uniformity of current was attainable. Scientific American Supplement, No. 384, May 12, 1883
  • Our economic fortunes are inseparable from those of Europe.
  • Great SF stories are inseparable from the science in them. MIND MELD: The Best Genre-Related Books/Films/Shows Consumed in 2009 (Part 3)
  • Applied mathematics and computer science are distinct disciplines, but they are now locked for ever in an inseparable embrace.
  • In defending itself so thoroughly against the monarch , the milkweed became inseparable from the butterfly.
  • A new criterion for basing should be as much political as geostrategic, inasmuch as the two are now inseparable.
  • furphies," which ever afterwards seemed to be an inseparable feature of military life. The 28th: A Record of War Service in the Australian Imperial Force, 1915-19, Vol. I Egypt, Gallipoli, Lemnos Island, Sinai Peninsula
  • Unemployment and inner city decay are inseparable issues which must be tackled together.
  • There was not just a close link, but an inseparable link between the deportation proceedings and the bail proceedings. Times, Sunday Times
  • As the unprejudiced reader sees [Dr Gummere proceeds] this clear and admirable account confirms the doctrine of early days revived with fresh ethnological evidence in the writings of Dr Brown and of Adam Smith, that dance, poetry and song were once a single and inseparable function, and is in itself fatal to the idea of rhythmic prose, of solitary recitation, as foundations of poetry…. IV. Children’s Reading (II)
  • But the drumbeat, as the baritone voice of the narrator reminds the audience, is an inseparable part of African music.
  • Benevolence inflames the anger of the young men of the cités as much as repression, because their rage is inseparable from their being.
  • So that it may, I confess, give temporal impunity to such as transgress upon this account, but for all that, it can never by so doing warrant the transgression itself; it may indeed indemnify the person, but cannot take away the guilt, which, resulting from the very nature of the action, is inseparable from it. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. IV.
  • That rare possibility of self-contemplation which comes in any complete severance from our wonted life made her judge herself as she had never done before: the compunction which is inseparable from a sympathetic nature keenly alive to the possible experience of others, began to stir in her with growing force. Romola
  • Monopoly capitalism, in this sense, was inseparable from interimperialist rivalry, manifested primarily in the form of a struggle for global markets.
  • In her world, marriage and social class were almost inseparable. Times, Sunday Times
  • We became inseparable very quickly, and that brotherly bond only grew stronger as time passed. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘Those assets should be included in the city budget… they are inseparable from the financial status of the city,’ he said.
  • The two became inseparable business partners and friends. Times, Sunday Times
  • He firmly believes liberty is inseparable from social justice.
  • And Ishmael grew to feel that he belonged to his liege lady; that they were forever inseparate and inseparable. Ishmael In the Depths
  • They were inseparable, those two, and of course their serious discussions and long talks with their parents resulted in the decision to be married.
  • Particularist sentiment was inseparable from aristocratic privilege; local liberties and personal liberties were part and parcel of the same system.
  • For his first dozen movies, he was inseparable from producer Alan Marshall, but they have not worked together since Angel Heart in 1987.
  • He firmly believes liberty is inseparable from social justice.
  • And it is a war that is terribly unequal: a war of men against women, as separate, complimentarily inseparable, socially-constructed classes. Stan Goff: The Governator Calls the Question (again)
  • Rather, he states that they are intrinsically and eternally inseparable, while also being distinct.
  • Mauldin's style is inseparable from his material; I have a hard time imagining that a shaky, unshaded drawing of two blobs in a foxhole would have the same impact of Mauldin's expressive character studies.
  • Therefore, either realism or abstractionism or modern arts has an inseparable relation with visual experience.
  • They're like brothers, inseparable brothers.
  • The notes of the tour, set down on his return to Chelsea and republished in 1882, have only the literary merit of the vigorous descriptive touches inseparable from the author's lightest writing; otherwise they are mere rough-and-tumble jottings, with no consecutive meaning, of a rapid hawk's-eye view of the four provinces. Thomas Carlyle
  • And I doubt not but we shall find, in our inquiry, that it is no such figment as some, ignorant of these things, do imagine; but, on the contrary, an important truth immixed with the most fundamental principles of the mystery of the gospel, and inseparable from the grace of God in Christ Jesus. The Doctrine of Justification by Faith
  • It is therefore logical that energy efficiency and reduction of oil use have become inseparable.
  • You two were always so close, nearly inseparable at times.
  • Yes, the battles, sieges, fortunes, that he has passed ought to have brought back upon him, that from the earliest achievement in which he displayed that military genius which has placed him foremost in the annals of modern warfare, down to that last and surpassing combat which has made his name imperishable, the Irish soldiers, with whom our armies are filled, were the inseparable auxiliaries to his glory. The Glory of English Prose Letters to My Grandson
  • He firmly believes liberty is inseparable from social justice.
  • A better understanding of technology would instead assume that we are ultimately inseparable from the tools we use Adam Elkus: Beyond Twitter Revolutions and False Choices
  • It is the language of someone who recognizes that the quest for a spiritual dimension in cultural life is inseparable from the moral priorities of the individual.
  • They had been together for almost three years and seemed an inseparable pair. The Sun
  • Many players are inseparable from a particular cue throughout their lives. Times, Sunday Times
  • _inseparable in such bodies as these_, namely, the passing of a current, and decomposition; and this is as true of the cells in the battery as of the water cell; for no voltaic battery has as yet been constructed in which the chemical action is only that of combination: _decomposition is always included_, and is, I believe, an essential chemical part. Experimental Researches in Electricity, Volume 1
  • These meanings attract powerful emotions and can affect the patient's clinical condition and become inseparable from the individual's life history.
  • In one of the British wars called the peninsular war, two horses, who had long been associated together, assisting in dragging the same piece of artillery, became so much attached to each other as to be inseparable companions. Stories about Animals: with Pictures to Match
  • An inseparable trait of the paratroopers was the hunting dexterity of each particular fighter.
  • This I call the fetishism which is attached to the products of labor, as soon as they are produced as commodities, and which therefore is inseparable from the production of commodities. Archive 2005-11-01
  • (Soundbite of song, "Tango Square") EYRE: The bandoneon, with its unique timbre and expressiveness, was created in Germany, but it soon became inseparable from the sexy new dance music emerging from the bars and bordellos of Buenos Aires. Gotan Project: An International Spin On Argentina's Tango
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • The corals are inseparable from the matrix of the rocks and generally badly weathered on the exposed surfaces and recrystallized internally.
  • Comrade Blas Roca, who was an inseparable comrade in the struggle, a close friend and Lazaro Pena's political leader, wrote about him in 1938 the following beautiful lines: I met Lazaro Pena when he was already a union leader, when he was already a leader of the labor movement beloved by all for his inexcitable attitude, for his extraordinary courage in collective decisions, for his loyalty to the principles that he advocates and for his honesty in the defense of the interests of his class. CASTRO DELIVERS EULOGY FOR LAZARO PENA
  • Thenceforth the aspersorium was the inseparable accompaniment of the font. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
  • And even though they weren't partnered together, they were practically inseparable.
  • The supermodels have become inseparable in recent weeks. The Sun
  • These 2 sides to the republican movement are inseparable and interdependent.
  • He becomes key in an engagingly knotty second half that shows flawed characters making a choice between competing evils as the personal and the political become inseparable. Times, Sunday Times
  • We became inseparable very quickly, and that brotherly bond only grew stronger as time passed. Times, Sunday Times
  • In defending itself so thoroughly against the monarch , the milkweed became inseparable from the butterfly.
  • Since then the pair have been inseparable and were looking forward to their big day, planned for this July.
  • Either way, the play, the players and the landscape that once lived in all of their minds are inseparable. BRITAIN BC: Life In Britain and Ireland before the Romans
  • He had never been addicted to drink, and his only indulgence was his brierwood pipe, which was his almost inseparable companion. Klondike Nuggets and How Two Boys Secured Them
  • Work and ongoing education are becoming inseparable in our society.
  • Correct Orthodox belief says that Christ has one indivisible nature, human and divine, godhead and humanity fused and inseparable, that the incarnate Christ was fully human and fully divine at one and the same time.
  • Our moral convictions must arm us to face the ambiguity inseparable from the long haul.
  • Until recently, the term cohesion had but one special meaning to dentists, and that as applied to gold for filling teeth; being understood as the property by which layers of this metal could be united without force so as to be inseparable. Tin Foil and Its Combinations for Filling Teeth
  • They are inseparable; taboo love blossoms in the manner of Heavenly Creatures, yet all the while trouble is brewing and Considine is brooding.
  • Two experienced Spaniards, inseparable partners, were bound for Ancohuma.
  • The use of the primitive Etruscan style suggests a time so ancient as to be inseparable from nature.
  • The righting of relationships in the whole community was inseparable from the experience of forgiveness from God.
  • It is a mistake to call Caliban's theology a study of primitive religion; for primitive religion is inseparable from the primitive tribe, and Caliban the savage, who has never known society, was a conception as unhistorical as it was exquisitely adapted to the individualist ways of Browning's imagination. Robert Browning
  • The two are so entwined they are virtually inseparable. The Sun
  • But whereas there are different apprehensions about these effects or concomitants of conviction (in compunction, humiliation, self-judging, with sorrow for sin committed, and the like), as also about the degrees of them, as ordinarily prerequired unto faith and conversion unto God, I shall speak very briefly unto them, so far as they are inseparable from the conviction asserted. The Doctrine of Justification by Faith
  • Other than that you are a MacMurrough and as such bear a name inseparable from our country’s cause. At Swim, Two Boys
  • Here anchoring is inseparable from adjusting to how fluid movement creates Strange Affinities: A Partial Return to Wordsworthian Poetics After Modernism
  • And the musicianship is so ingrained that it's inseparable from the fact of her: she's not "being" a gospel singer, she's not "being" a blues guitarist, she's at the point where she's just being. Ora labora
  • Or, these inseparable couples could be holding on for dear life, dangling just slightly above eye level so we look up at them pryingly, like equally helpless children.
  • Football and hooliganism were inseparable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Courtesy is the inseparable companion of virtue.
  • And upon questioning from the committee, he said that the values of Inuit are virtually inseparable from those of the Christian faith.
  • They have been inseparable ever since and Alan proposed on the very spot they met just three months later.
  • Kelly considers equality to be inseparable from true liberty.
  • In a blinding flash the diamond, moonstone, opal, ruby and sapphire were molded together, inseparable, forever.
  • Immanuel Kant emphasized that morality was inseparable from true autonomy: the autonomous human agent chose to submit himself to the moral law.
  • Is hysteria fundamentally a psychological disorder with physical manifestations; an organic disease with mental and emotional epiphenomena; or some inseparable intermixture of the two?
  • So the martial arts are a great way to dish out a bit of punishment, with a heavy hand if required, but the spiritual dimension to the sport is inseparable from the principal aim of the fight: to knock down your opponent.
  • George later became our inseparable companion.
  • Fortunately, racing and drinking have always been inseparable and there are many tasty classics created in the name of equine pursuits that are far easier to pull off than the popular julep. Beyond the Julep
  • I had, it appears, about Heiberg's Klister and Malle, an inseparable betrothed couple, used what was, for that matter, an undoubtedly Kierkegaardian expression, viz., to beslobber a relation. Recollections Of My Childhood And Youth
  • Basically, what CIP Summer School has done for me is to concretize the fact that our lives are knit up together, our futures are inseparable. Kelly Figueroa-Ray: On The Cutting Edge Of Interfaith Work: An Open Thank You Letter To The Sultan Of Oman
  • They began stepping out as a couple earlier this year and have become almost inseparable. The Sun
  • If they are historically informed, language sceptics may claim that this process of extinction is nothing new, perhaps inseparable from the human condition.
  • Bree and I had met in 1st grade and ever since then we have been inseparable.
  • The pair became engrossed in conversation and have been inseparable ever since.
  • We met quite by chance, but we quickly became friends -- what in my country we call chums -- and we have been inseparable ever since. The Net
  • The artists evince a political frustration apparently inseparable from a sense of personal impotence.
  • He ought to have remembered that, from the earliest achievement in which he displayed that military genius which has placed him foremost in the annals of modern warfare, down to that last and surpassing combat which has made his name imperishable—from Assaye to Waterloo—the Irish soldiers, with whom your armies are filled, were the inseparable auxiliaries to the glory with which his unparalleled successes have been crowned. I. On the Irish as "Aliens"
  • His family had moved from the other side of town when he and Tristan were four, just starting kindergarten, and those two had been inseparable ever since.
  • His blood, soul, and divinity become present by concomitance, their inseparable connection with his body, not precisely because of the words of consecration.
  • For it is not to be understood of itself that the owner, besides the use of the thing, which he has granted to the receiver, and the detriment that is inseparable from such use, also gives a guarantee or warrandice against all damage that may arise from such use. The Science of Right
  • Shelly's identification with work is inseparable from Grand Isle.
  • Ministry and personal life are almost inseparable. Christianity Today
  • Applied mathematics and computer science are distinct disciplines, but they are now locked for ever in an inseparable embrace.
  • Touching which point Proclus the Platonist disputeth, that the compounded essence of the world (and because compounded, therefore dissipable) is continued, and knit to the Divine Being, by an individual and inseparable power, flowing from Divine unity; and that the world's natural appetite of Prefaces and Prologues to Famous Books with Introductions, Notes and Illustrations
  • Of course watching Google become a residue on the web itself, imbuing its colorful primaries on HTTP, as a lichen seduces a redwood, becoming inseparable from the host, also suggests a more organic approach to business as usual. Generation Open | FactoryCity
  • This strange limitation arises because the very process of observation is inseparable from the state being measured.
  • Hence, the development of socialism is internally inseparable from the growth of democracy.
  • It is therefore logical that energy efficiency and reduction of oil use have become inseparable.
  • They were an inseparable pair whose views complemented each other's work.
  • inseparable pieces of rock
  • The stock-clerk, though Richard's superior in the business, acted more like a chum, and in the evenings the two, accompanied by Mattie Massanet, walked, talked, played games, or listened to Mrs. Massanet's music on the flutina, and were all but inseparable. Richard Dare's Venture
  • They met when they served in the army during the Second World War and were inseparable from then on, despite the vile prejudice (and the criminalisation of their love) that they had to confront.
  • Courtesy is the inseparable companion of virtue.
  • From then on, we were almost inseparable. The Sun
  • The two brothers are almost inseparable.
  • They were said to have become inseparable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Above all, her fine pieces of poetry show, as do classic Japanese haiku and tanka, the unity and harmony of all things, the sensibility that human beings and nature are one and inseparable.
  • Yet here, as many another time in these devious manoeuvres, that fearful dilemma interposed -- inseparable in its many forms from all collective action whether in cabinet or party; so fit to test to the very uttermost all the moral fortitude, all the wisdom of a minister, his sense of proportion, his strength of will, his prudent pliancy of judgment, his power of balance, his sure perception of the ruling fact. The Life of William Ewart Gladstone, Vol. 1 (of 3) 1809-1859
  • The notes of the tour, set down on his return to Chelsea and republished in 1882, have only the literary merit of the vigorous descriptive touches inseparable from the author's lightest writing; otherwise they are mere rough-and-tumble jottings, with no consecutive meaning, of a rapid hawk's-eye view of the four provinces. Thomas Carlyle
  • A man is inseparable from his congenital vanities and stupidities, as a dog is inseparable from its fleas.
  • Anti-Communism, they argued, and argued successfully, was inseparable from liberalism.
  • The Word was with God, that is, in the unique equality of the divine; for this Word that is with God is equal to him in divinity, since the Word that is in God is inseparable from God and consubstantial with him.
  • It is still possible to defend love and excellence, courage and charity, from those who imagine such real human experiences to be an illusion, and to accept that these virtues and experiences are inseparable from human finitude.
  • As Crary notes, "movement and time could be seen and experienced, but never represented" (34), and hence the camera obscura "is inseparable from a certain metaphysic of interiority: it is a figure for both the observer who is nominally a free sovereign individual and a privatized subject confined in a quasi-domestic space, cut off from a public exterior world" (39). Smoke and Mirrors: Internalizing the Magic Lantern show in _Vilette_
  • Fourth, mayor sent word to Belgrade citizens that they are not obliged to express publicly something from their private lives (the European Court for Human Rights confirmed in a few verdicts that the private is inseparable from the public). Global Voices in English » Serbia: Threats to LGBT Population
  • The pair became virtually inseparable. Times, Sunday Times
  • The two soon became inseparable and loved spending time together. The Sun
  • Offspring and their mothers are inseparable during the first few years of the youngster's life.
  • Kennan's name is inseparable from the doctrine of containment that influenced American foreign policy throughout the Cold War.
  • The middle class is inseparable from the American Dream. In health care, the middle-class pander continues
  • The Socialist Republic of Vietnam is the inseparable sister of revolutionary Cuba. [applause] CASTRO READS MAIN REPORT AT PCC CONGRESS
  • We have all been inseparable; I mean people get us mixed up even though we look nothing alike.
  • Nicholas added: ‘We thought it was amazing but we have been inseparable ever since.’
  • This also is granted, so he do it in his own dominions, or in the dominions of any other prince that hath given him that power; but not universally, in right of the popedom: for that power belongeth to every Christian sovereign, within the bounds of his own empire, and is inseparable from the sovereignty. Leviathan
  • By this idea of solidity is the extension of body distinguished from the extension of space: - the extension of body being nothing but the cohesion or continuity of solid, separable, movable parts; and the extension of space, the continuity of unsolid, inseparable, and immovable parts. God, Aids & Circumcision
  • His wife Buakhieo, 34, was a waitress in a restaurant in Thailand when the pair met and they have been inseparable ever since.
  • In this passage, sewing and conversation are allied and inseparable, part of the alternative methodology of speech Walker is explicating.
  • The whist drive seems to be a thing inseparable from the social life of the town.
  • Soon they are inseparable and their relationship becomes more intimate.
  • There was none of the filth and squalor they regarded as inseparable from city life.
  • Therefore, either realism or abstractionism or modern arts has an inseparable relation with visual experience.
  • Applied mathematics and computer science are distinct disciplines, but they are now locked for ever in an inseparable embrace.
  • Thereafter they were inseparable, despite the wicked stepmother status accorded by her stepchildren. Times, Sunday Times
  • By this idea of solidity is the extension of body distinguished from the extension of space: — the extension of body being nothing but the cohesion or continuity of solid, separable, movable parts; and the extension of space, the continuity of unsolid, inseparable, and immovable parts. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding

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