Dictionary
been unshakeable
adjective
Not able to be shaken; firm, solid, resolute
Exact(1)
Others, chiefly Matthew D'Ancona (Sunday Telegraph), think the next general election was effectively handed to Mr Cameron the moment Mr Miliband was declared Labour leader on Saturday.Interestingly, Mr D'Ancona's view, which has been unshakeable since the beginning of the contest, rests as much on personality as ideology.
Similar(59)
Patrick Vieira is unshakeable.
But a few old grievances are unshakeable.
Our commitment to Israel's security is unshakeable.
("It's unshakeable!," you might say. Listen if you must).
From Hawass's perspective his position is unshakeable.
Friendships can be shaken, but our friendship is unshakeable.
HIS confidence in his finance minister, Antonio Palocci, is "unshakeable", insisted Brazil's president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, this month.
Even in the 1990s, when big servers were rendering Wimbledon unwatchable, tennis's hegemony was unshakeable.
Jan's commitment to social change was unshakeable and underpinned all that she did thereafter.
It's unshakeable, and we are obliged to live with it in this era when television rules.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com