[
UK
/ʌntʃˈælɪndʒəbəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
not open to challenge
a position of unchallengeable supremacy
unchallengeable facts
How To Use unchallengeable In A Sentence
- The most important of the latter, the five annually elected ephors, had exceptionally wide and apparently unchallengeable powers during their year of office, though they could only hold the office once.
- By contrast, the appeal of the industrial co-operative remains unchallengeable, its ecological niche exclusive to it.
- Scripture used in this way, with supposed supernatural authority, is unchallengeable.
- Parliaments in the English tradition are fiercely protective of their constitutional supremacy and they are unchallengeable masters of their own proceedings.
- Government officials have also challenged high court rights to have any review power over the issue of detention or preventative orders, declaring that the regime's authority is absolute and unchallengeable.
- This privileged status in the industrial relations system was unchallengeable for many years, allowing the Histadrut to define and dictate the scope of conditions of employment in the economy.
- The President's rule is effectively unchallengeable, though, even without his party's huge parliamentary majority.
- I didn't know what to make of the unchallengeable fact that some of the police officers said their views had been sharpened by on-the-street experience of dealing with ethnic minorities.
- The dissolution of the Soviet Union leaves the US as the planet's unchallenged and unchallengeable superpower - not just in the military and ideological sense, but in economics, technology and popular culture.
- The sovereign right of the Irish people to decide their own future is unchallengeable.