Dictionary
was inalienable
adjective
Incapable of being alienated, surrendered, or transferred to another; not alienable.
synonyms
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Exact(6)
The right to marry, he said, was inalienable.
Waqf land was inalienable, but private land was subject to speculation and concentration.
Basutoland, which had been deprived of its most fertile lands in the 19th century, was a de facto reserve, although, as in Bechuanaland, land remaining in African hands was inalienable.
I would be able to visit the ancient Orthodox monasteries on which Milosevic based his claim that Kosovo was inalienable Serbian territory, and sip macchiato – makiato in Albanian – in the pavement cafés of what is no longer Pristina to its inhabitants but Prishtina, capital of an independent nation.
However, in both cases, the Marshall Court continued to apply the rule that aboriginal title was inalienable, except to The Crown.
Absent those specific exceptions, the rest of the stuff was inalienable, not up for grabs, not dependent in any way on Government's decision to grant or withhold them.
Similar(51)
They are inalienable.
Such rights are inalienable.
Globalisation is inalienable fact.
Press freedom and freedom of expression are inalienable human rights.
Land itself continued to be inalienable, but the right to use the land could be mortgaged.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com