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the immemorial
adjective
That is beyond memory; ancient.
Exact(36)
The "immemorial statutes" were only fifty years old, an early infancy for a statute.
Human sacrifice in ancient societies and the immemorial ugliness of war are his themes.
And beyond that, as the cherished novelist assures us, "the immemorial silence of pastoral Sicily".
In my heart of hearts is lodged hunger immemorial, the immemorial hunger of Spain.
The mammy doll was there in the immemorial tradition of the black servant, an intended touch of exoticism.
In conformity with the immemorial usage of the East, various boons and remissions of penalties were announced to the people.
Similar(24)
From the time immemorial until the turn of the century, organizations of different capacities have been investing in human resources as one way of sustaining the existence of their operations.
From the time immemorial until the turn of the century, it has been very uncommon to see men participating actively in the reproductive health services or rather MCH services in general.
"It was," Wright explains, "his natural-born right to pluck history at random from any era of the time immemorial of the black man's existence on his own land".
Cow dung is applied in the crop fields since the time immemorial; use of chicken manure in the recent past is very common in Bangladesh.
All of Botticelli's imagination and draughtsmanship are concentrated in the final, immemorial image - a vision Dante declared unimaginable - the holy family floating in the extreme distance, a tiny constellation transfigured in light.
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