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Discover LudwigThe word "unremovable" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to describe something that is impossible to get rid of, for example: "The stain on the wall was unremovable, no matter how hard we scrubbed."
Dictionary
unremovable
adjective
Unable to be removed
Exact(7)
Only a conservatism based on the "rooted" values of America's Judeo-Christian heritage and an understanding of "the inner unremovable nature of man as the ultimate source of evil" could protect Western civilization from attempts to undermine — or perfect — it.
On home viewing formats (where stereoscopy is still a non-starter) this will doubtless ship out in "flatscreen" bulk, although it's unlikely to achieve the kind of hard-rotation repeat-viewing that has made The Lion King all but unremovable from DVD and Blu-ray players up and down the land.
After only a day or two of wind-shredding, the micron-thick plastic of a dry-cleaning bag is all but unremovable.
Together Kenyon and Nancy had made a paint-splattered attempt to deprive the basement room of its unremovable dourness, and neither was aware of failure.
Contrary to their broker's assumption, the fact that the house had two essentially unremovable tenants paying a total of about $1,300 a month was, for Mr. Balme and Ms. Rubio, what made the transaction work.
He'll repeat a riff once or twice or drag a note, but it's an unremovable part of a plan; he edits out all the storyteller flourishes that trumpet players are fond of: high whinnies, low growls, blues mannerisms.
On the Democratic side, Bill Bradley has warned that the fund-raising scandal is an unremovable stain on Mr. Gore's record.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com