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How To Use Unsusceptible In A Sentence

  • However, he was not unsusceptible to those dark powers which amassed now against his soul.
  • And a well-disciplined gentleman from Sandhurst wasn't unsusceptible to the environment, either. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • That out of the sea were born either, no one name unsusceptible. I heard you singing in the bedrooms
  • It was the rare mundane who was totally unsusceptible to their influence. Clockwork Angel
  • Without Chelex, nicking may also involve a second mechanism that is relatively unsusceptible to radical quenching-perhaps via the formation of chromophores that may directly initiate DNA cleavage with UV-A excitation.
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  • Those who proved themselves unsusceptible to bribery were murdered.
  • Such alterations are inherently unsusceptible to quantitative measurement or prediction.
  • When they attempt to engage with the gun at ranges longer than that, say adding another 200 yards to the distance, our troops are relatively unsusceptible to the fire and pay it little heed.
  • The only question now agitated is, whether the author of nature has formed primordial parts unsusceptible of division, or if all is continually dividing and changing into other elements. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • That an appeal from an undereducated prettyboy would work on them more than their own NYT-readin ', independent-thinkin', unsusceptible-liberal-considered-opinion-actin 'selves is a much greater insult. SeeLight:
  • We cannot pronounce them unsusceptible of civilization since even apes have been taught to eat, drink, repose and dress like men.
  • The life of men, of the beasts of the field, of the earth itself seemed destined to revolve in an everlasting cycle, a natural cycle, unsusceptible to the changes of time.
  • And a well-disciplined gentleman from Sandhurst wasn't unsusceptible to the environment, either. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • The U.S. may be encouraged by allies and commentators again, at the point that sanctions are judged to be ineffective (or if the U.N. Security Council can't even agree on sanctions), to talk directly with the Iranians, but talking to the Iranians will still mean negotiating give-and-take (and negotiating with a strengthened Iran that has either proven unsusceptible to sanctions, or proven that the world is not united against it). Hooman Majd: Why We Are Going To Go To War
  • Since toddlers are largely unsusceptible to cease-and-desist letters, it fell to the cassette makers to stop abetting the kids' illegal behavior.
  • These patterns suggest the existence of both inherent susceptibility and resistance, but also underscore the ability of S. mansoni to adapt to and acquire previously unsusceptible species as hosts.
  • He has the power to make hearts beat faster, time move at a slower pace and, for the unsusceptible, flesh creep.
  • More importantly, being rich doesn't make them unsusceptible to problems every family faces.
  • Last night we had the unexpected bonus of Trudie Styler popping in to play Mrs Thrale, who charmed the normally unsusceptible hero. A Dish of Tea With Dr Johnson – review
  • Cold as he was, and wretched as he declared himself to be, he was not wholly unsusceptible of attachments. Sketches by Boz
  • Can one fix some exquisite entity, as it were, in amber, immune from changing fashion and unsusceptible to the contamination of the whims of the insistent rich? Michael Henry Adams: The Art of the Steal: Betraying Dr. Albert Barnes and Future Generations
  • Romantic relationships have been presumed unsusceptible to a structure of rules, perhaps because of the widespread belief that love is the most intimate and idiosyncratic of human emotions.
  • Now we have a ghastly split between the mundane, apparently unsusceptible to any form of artistic transfiguration, and pure music whose splendour and misery are that it is uncontaminated by reality.
  • Suicide terrorists are not some other breed of men, unsusceptible to the usual tools of statecraft.
  • So I think a lot of the intolerance we encounter with regard to sleep is about control issues, as we say, ways of telling ourselves we're in control of something that is frighteningly unsusceptible to control. 'Insomniac'
  • The classic example of a public good is a lighthouse: unlike a private good, the benefits of the lighthouse are joint and, once produced, are unsusceptible to exclusion.

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