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unalienable

[ US /əˈneɪɫiˌɛnəbəɫ, əˈneɪɫjɛnəbəɫ/ ]
[ UK /ʌnˈe‍ɪli‍ənəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. incapable of being repudiated or transferred to another
    endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights
    endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights

How To Use unalienable In A Sentence

  • The ideas of liberty, self-determination, representative government and unalienable fights, spread and took root.
  • He further expressed this in arguing that each person's unalienable right was to ‘as much liberty as each may exercise without injury to the equal liberty of his fellow citizens.’
  • Your angel energy is an unalienable part of you which, even if it is temporarily veiled, can never be taken away from you.
  • Isn't healthcare and all the radiological scanning you want an unalienable right granted to us by our forefathers?
  • The sentence's assertion of equality and unalienable rights derives absolutely from the authority of the ‘WE’ that begins it.
  • They brought with them an awareness of their chosen position in this world (the Muses decided, not them), and a conviction that they had an unalienable right to literary art.
  • In the American ‘Declaration of Independence’, the pursuit of happiness is listed as one of the unalienable rights, along with life and liberty.
  • Agreeing that mankind has certain unalienable rights has always proved much easier than agreeing what they should be. Times, Sunday Times
  • This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
  • I wrote Professor Volokh to ask him what he thought of the proposition that men are endowed ‘by nature’ with ‘certain unalienable rights’ among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
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