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.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • 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.
  • Unchallengeable examples of what are assumed to have been beta quartz appear to be limited to occurrences in silicic volcanic rocks, such as rhyolite, liparite, and dacite.
  • The demise of the USSR, they declared, created for the United States the opportunity to establish an unchallengeable global hegemony.
  • In the ad, a Navy crewmate says, ‘He had unfailing instinct and unchallengeable leadership.’
  • The U.S. military was so superior as to be virtually unchallengeable on the field of battle.
  • Perhaps so, if the present masters of jurisprudence in the law schools and on the courts are in unchallengeable control.
  • unchallengeable facts
  • Yale University may promulgate the ‘right to think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable,’ but I have no right to expect funding or resources to help confirm my hypothesis.
  • However, that it is now a constitutional document of some sort is an unchallengeable assertion within the New Zealand context.
  • The U.S. was so pre-eminent in military power as to be unchallengeable in any serious way, but it was also widely admired and emulated.
  • These powers include unrestricted and essentially unchallengeable authority to arrest and kill people in ‘carrying out their duties.’
  • It was hospitable to the idea of the leader whose godlike vision is authoritative and unchallengeable.
  • The USA is already unchallengeable in terms of military power.
  • He felt God-like, a deity with the power and life and death and unchallengeable invulnerability.
  • What is more, the story has situated him in an afterlife which guarantees his terms: he knows about time and language because he is in the unchallengeable position of having transcended them both.
  • Surely the unchallengeable fact is that Wiltshire County Council, after a considerable period of negotiation, consultation, and debate, decided on the Eastern route as their preferred option.
  • It would be interesting to know how many other United players have spent the last week wishing they too had a dicky hamstring and such unchallengeable seniority.
  • a position of unchallengeable supremacy
  • By officially endorsing Jesus as the Son of God, Constantine turned Jesus into a deity who existed beyond the scope of the human world, an entity whose power was unchallengeable.
  • Within the party his position is unchallengeable.
  • U.S. policymakers have succumbed to hubris in the false belief that American dominance is an unchallengeable fact of international life.
  • By contrast, the appeal of the industrial co-operative remains unchallengeable, its ecological niche exclusive to it.
  • He felt God-like, a deity with the power and life and death and unchallengeable invulnerability.
  • They can create unchallengeable hierarchies of bejewelled or epauletted shysters, but then so can other human organisations. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now they expect to hold an unchallengeable contest to revoke the president's mandate and those of the 29 representatives in the National Assembly that remain committed to him.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy