Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- Incapable of being dissociated or separated; inseparable: as, indissociable states of consciousness.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Not
dissociable
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word indissociable.
Examples
-
Indeed, the account he provides is indissociable from the predicament whose discovery he reports in it.
-
Nevertheless, the event of these essays proves to be indissociable from the question of de Man's legacy, and this becomes especially clear when de Man registers the opposition between their event and an historical (or psychoanalytic) account of their emergence:
-
This residual negativity — the blind underside of elegance — coincides with the return of the question of history and ethics beyond rhetorical reading, and, in this respect, proves indissociable from the question of the relation of these works (and these authors) to the work and the teaching of Paul de
-
The pluralism indissociable from a democratic society, which has been dearly won over the centuries, depends on it.
-
On this view the arrival of Christ as God-Man is indissociable from the reception of Christ by the Church or proto-Church in Mary.
When you reach the bottom of the barrel, start digging. 2008
-
As any American who has created or beheld a moving or still image, who has sung or hummed or heard a song, who has written words or knelt to pray them, can easily attest, our culture "lived" and our culture "done" are as indissociable as politics expressed and policies endured.
-
But I do not for a moment believe that his greatness is in his status as a thinker: even less, that the poet and the thinker are indissociable.
Life of Robert Browning Sharp, William, 1855-1905 1897
-
But I do not for a moment believe that his greatness is in his status as a thinker: even less, that the poet and the thinker are indissociable.
Life of Robert Browning William Sharp 1880
-
The problems in our educational system are indissociable from broader malignant trends in our society and they can't be solved by lots of testing and by punitive actions against schools that are not performing well.
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Ed.D. Matthew Lynch 2012
-
Pope Benedict XVI comments in his reading for February 20, "Truth and worship stand in an indissociable relationship to each other; one cannot really flourish without the other, however often they have gone their separate ways in the course of history."
unknown title 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.