[
UK
/ʌntʃˈeɪndʒəbəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
not changeable or subject to change
one of the unchangeable facts of life
the unchangeable seasons
a fixed and unchangeable part of the germ plasm
How To Use unchangeable In A Sentence
- So weeding out potential jurors with unchangeable views on guilt or innocence has the elaborateness of celebrity trials like that of O.J. Simpson, who was acquitted at the same courthouse in 1995. Jackson jury Q&A tests media's grip
- In her opinion, Judaic biblical laws and tradition are sacred and unchangeable, and Kornfeld's presumptuousness in altering them makes him a pagan.
- Long hours are regarded as an unchangeable fact of life for many workers including flight attendants, postal managers, public servants, teachers, strappers, journalists, paramedics and doctors.
- He is not bound by any so-called unchangeable laws. The Great Doctrines of the Bible
- We do not suggest that there is or should be an ideal or unchangeable system of collective government, still less that procedures are in aggregate any less effective now than in earlier times.
- Assume behaviour and roles are genetic and unchangeable and they'll remain the same; assume they are changeable and you are likely to succeed in changing them.
- the unchangeable seasons
- We cannot repudiate unchangeable truths, their opponents retort.
- Lefty was an unchangeable dinosaur; a man doomed by his own personal code - a tragic figure.
- It is to the love of this light that I would exhort you, beloved; that ye would cry out by your works, when the Lord passeth by; let the voice of faith sound out, that Jesus was standing still, that is, the unchangeable, abiding wisdom of God, and the majesty of the Word of God, by which all things were made, may open your eyes. The World's Great Sermons, Volume 01 Basil to Calvin