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单词 unchangeable
释义

Definition of unchangeable in English:

unchangeable

adjectiveʌnˈtʃeɪn(d)ʒəb(ə)lˌənˈtʃeɪndʒəb(ə)l
  • Not liable to variation or able to be altered.

    personality characteristics are virtually unchangeable
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Young Americans today have no point of reference in their lived experience that tells them that collective action can change what is seemingly unchangeable.
    • There is no constant factor in Nature, and there could be no unchangeable laws.
    • Consistently, he affirms that joy is at the core of our existence and helps people discover and enjoy for themselves a beautiful place within that which is permanent and unchangeable.
    • As with the recent death of Pope John Paul II, a reign that had come to seem unchangeable was finally coming to an end.
    • We cannot repudiate unchangeable truths, their opponents retort.
    • Once equality becomes thinkable, that is, once the notion that inequalities are eternal and unchangeable is shattered, people begin to seek equality relentlessly and compulsively.
    • He who makes the most money, makes the rules, and the only unchangeable laws concern supply and demand.
    • Only one thing is unchangeable, and that is the speed of light, which travels at 300 million metres a second, regardless of how fast anyone observing it is moving.
    • When we say something is a part of our nature, it makes it seem to be a permanent, unchangeable thing.
    • Who cares about the unchangeable petty prejudices of the deeply stupid as long as they are prevented formally and rigorously from acting upon them?
    • And they would not, like the vast majority of white South Africans, accept it as inevitable, eternal, or unchangeable.
    • This teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable.
    • We do not suggest that there is or should be an ideal or unchangeable system of collective government, still less that procedures are in aggregate any less effective now than in earlier times.
    • They are constant companions - unchanging, unchangeable.
    • The newly established status quo could not be left unchangeable.
    • They are engraved on the political landscape, unchanging, perhaps unchangeable, and the current round of violence and mayhem is no exception.
    • For Augustine, there are two fundamental objects of knowledge, the created and the Untreated, changeable nature and unchangeable Truth.
    • Churchill was right all along: he had observed Hitler closely in the 1920s, and understood something unchangeable, constant, within him.
    • In her opinion, Judaic biblical laws and tradition are sacred and unchangeable, and Kornfeld's presumptuousness in altering them makes him a pagan.
    • Faced with the same, unchangeable immensity all around one, the years fell away.
    Synonyms
    unalterable, immutable, invariable, unvarying, invariant, changeless, firm, fixed, hard and fast, cast-iron, set in stone, set, decided, established, permanent, deep-rooted, enduring, abiding, lasting, indestructible, ineradicable, irreversible, unfading, constant, perpetual, eternal, lifelong
    rare incommutable, perdurable

Derivatives

  • unchangeability

  • nounʌntʃeɪn(d)ʒəˈbɪlɪti
    • Since everything is trying to reach rest and unchangeability there must be a goal corresponding to what everything is trying to achieve.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The note of unchangeability loomed above all, which is why early rumblings about Mass in ‘the vernacular’ were rudely dismissed by every monsignor to whom I ever handed cruets.
      • Nor is any sort of necessity imposed upon the things God wills from the eternity and unchangeability of the divine will.
      • Flexibility and changeability are merely the opposites of unchangeability and solidity.
      • There are some problems in formulating a doctrine of God's unchangeability from the Bible.
  • unchangeableness

  • noun
    • So to signify eternity's unchangeableness and constancy Boethius used the word possession.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It tells us that Elohim has permanent existence, and announces the faithfulness and unchangeableness of the One who is always true to His Word, and is the same yesterday, today and forever.
      • The preface, at the beginning of which he affirms his ‘fidelity towards Her, whom I must still honor in the dust’, summarizes modern European history, demonstrating the unchangeableness of God's judgement.
      • That impression of eternity goes hand in hand with the notion of purity, and the two combine to form a sensation of unchangeableness, a kind of holy stasis unafflicted by the compromises and corruption of the commercial cinema.
  • unchangeably

  • adverb
    • Unfortunately, yet more evidence that Christianity is irrevocably tied, unchangeably, to its 2000 year old origins.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The lake has unchangeably remained the center of attraction for the people world over-but has unfortunately lost its pristine glory over the years due to the ceaseless encroachments of the avaricious residents.
      • That's the silly thing about identity systems, their content is meaningless unless identity is assigned unambiguously and unchangeably at the moment of birth!
      • The poem is ‘a Renaissance jewel, beautiful but (compared to Hamlet) troublingly unvoiced, relatively toneless, unchangeably small.’
      • By union with his person, that flesh participates in the divine nature and by this communion becomes unchangeably God; not only by the operation of divine grace, as was the case with the prophets, but by the coming of grace himself.
 
 

Definition of unchangeable in US English:

unchangeable

adjectiveˌənˈCHānjəb(ə)lˌənˈtʃeɪndʒəb(ə)l
  • Not liable to variation or able to be altered.

    personality characteristics are virtually unchangeable
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Faced with the same, unchangeable immensity all around one, the years fell away.
    • Who cares about the unchangeable petty prejudices of the deeply stupid as long as they are prevented formally and rigorously from acting upon them?
    • Once equality becomes thinkable, that is, once the notion that inequalities are eternal and unchangeable is shattered, people begin to seek equality relentlessly and compulsively.
    • In her opinion, Judaic biblical laws and tradition are sacred and unchangeable, and Kornfeld's presumptuousness in altering them makes him a pagan.
    • He who makes the most money, makes the rules, and the only unchangeable laws concern supply and demand.
    • Churchill was right all along: he had observed Hitler closely in the 1920s, and understood something unchangeable, constant, within him.
    • Young Americans today have no point of reference in their lived experience that tells them that collective action can change what is seemingly unchangeable.
    • This teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable.
    • They are engraved on the political landscape, unchanging, perhaps unchangeable, and the current round of violence and mayhem is no exception.
    • They are constant companions - unchanging, unchangeable.
    • When we say something is a part of our nature, it makes it seem to be a permanent, unchangeable thing.
    • We cannot repudiate unchangeable truths, their opponents retort.
    • We do not suggest that there is or should be an ideal or unchangeable system of collective government, still less that procedures are in aggregate any less effective now than in earlier times.
    • The newly established status quo could not be left unchangeable.
    • Only one thing is unchangeable, and that is the speed of light, which travels at 300 million metres a second, regardless of how fast anyone observing it is moving.
    • For Augustine, there are two fundamental objects of knowledge, the created and the Untreated, changeable nature and unchangeable Truth.
    • There is no constant factor in Nature, and there could be no unchangeable laws.
    • Consistently, he affirms that joy is at the core of our existence and helps people discover and enjoy for themselves a beautiful place within that which is permanent and unchangeable.
    • And they would not, like the vast majority of white South Africans, accept it as inevitable, eternal, or unchangeable.
    • As with the recent death of Pope John Paul II, a reign that had come to seem unchangeable was finally coming to an end.
    Synonyms
    unalterable, immutable, invariable, unvarying, invariant, changeless, firm, fixed, hard and fast, cast-iron, set in stone, set, decided, established, permanent, deep-rooted, enduring, abiding, lasting, indestructible, ineradicable, irreversible, unfading, constant, perpetual, eternal, lifelong
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 22:15:24