[
US
/ˌɪnˈsɛpɝəbɫi/
]
[ UK /ɪnsˈɛpəɹəbli/ ]
[ UK /ɪnsˈɛpəɹəbli/ ]
ADVERB
-
without possibility of separation
these two are inseparably linked
How To Use inseparably In A Sentence
- The drive to war is inseparably bound up with domestic policies aimed at enriching a financial oligarchy at the apex of society, through constant attacks on the living standards of working people.
- these two are inseparably linked
- In other words, what we, as human beings, perceive as matter (material) is inseparably connected to and sustained by electrical charges (energy) {fused, diffused, distributed and released by nitrogenic combustible gas mixture}. EzineArticles
- Just like that -- arm in arm, joking, "ragging" -- she used to walk with him round about the home in Ireland -- the world to one another and none else in the world, except the mother who was so intimately and inseparably of them that years past her death they still spoke of her as if she were alive. Once Aboard the Lugger
- George Eliot addresses this distinction between intellectual and felt understanding a number of times, especially in Middlemarch and Daniel Deronda: there's a difference between purely "theoretic" knowledge (ideas disconnected from feeling and practice) and true knowledge (bound up inseparably with one's relationship to the world). Relating
- And is not that the period in which our conduct or misconduct gives us a reputation or disreputation, that almost inseparably accompanies us throughout our whole future lives? Clarissa Harlowe
- Although independently verified, I do not see how design isomorphism is inseparably tied to (non-human) ID itself .... A Dubious "Opportunity" for IDers
- Although independently verified, I do not see how design isomorphism is inseparably tied to (non-human) ID itself. A Dubious "Opportunity" for IDers
- Now because all is here gradually incorporated with the understanding -- inasmuch as in the first place we judge problematically; then accept assertorically our judgement as true; lastly, affirm it as inseparably united with the understanding, that is, as necessary and apodeictical -- we may safely reckon these three functions of modality as so many momenta of thought. The Critique of Pure Reason
- 90, Roget, the sage, luminary, longhead, shining light, wizard of synonyms had seen twenty-five editions of the work that has come to be inseparably associated with his name as an eponymous word. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VI No 3