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13 Sentences With "inalterably"

How to use inalterably in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "inalterably" and check conjugation/comparative form for "inalterably". Mastering all the usages of "inalterably" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"The evidence for Pruitt's inalterably closed mind on CPP rulemaking is overwhelming," the senators wrote.
"It became very clear to me that the historical meaning of this statue has been inalterably changed," Signer said.
A red flag was raised instantly, and the direction of my judgment about Mr. Trump — already dismal — was inalterably set: No. Never.
And we watch all four lives collide in a moment of stunning horror that ­changes them inalterably and stains everything that comes after.
That never happened, for many reasons, most notably the requirement that any such agreement garner unanimity among almost 21992 countries, while the US, among others, was inalterably opposed.
Each interview encapsulates a lived narrative shaped by the effects of a war — in Vietnam referred to as the American War — which killed millions of people and inalterably changed a culture.
"When clear and convincing evidence exists that a regulator possesses an inalterably closed mind about a subject covered by a rulemaking, s/he is not permitted to participate in the rulemaking," they wrote.
Sponsor reserves the right to: (i) permanently disqualify from any Sweepstakes it sponsors any person it believes has intentionally violated these official rules; and (ii) withdraw a method of entry if it becomes technically corrupted (including if a computer virus or system malfunction inalterably impairs its ability to conduct the Sweepstakes).
As Hermann Diels said, > The investigations of the recently deceased Charles Graux, taken all too > prematurely from the world of scholarship, have made it henceforth > inalterably certain that the standard line (the stichos) of the ancients was > a unit of spatial length equal to the hexameter. Theodor Birt has rightly > erected his shrewd and persuasive The Nature of the Ancient Book upon this > foundation.H. Diels, 'Stichometrisches,' Hermes, vol. 17, no.
Other states followed the suit. On September 22, 1921 Latvia was admitted to membership in the League of Nations and remained a member until the formal dissolution of the League in 1946. On February 5, 1932, a Non-Aggression Treaty with the Soviet Union was signed, based on the August 11, 1920 treaty whose basic agreements inalterably and for all time form the firm basis of the relationship of the two states.
His service in the Senate ended in 1921. When Republican U.S. Representative Lloyd Thurston ran for the U.S. Senate in 1938, LeCompte ran for his seat in Iowa's 5th congressional district. In a successful bid for the Republican nomination in the primary, his advertisements stressed that he was "inalterably opposed to the New Deal Program of waste and extravagance."Karl M. LeCompte Advertisement, Moravia Union, 1938-06-02 at 4. In the general election, he defeated Albia, Iowa Postmaster Ruth F. Hollingshead, the first woman to run for Congress in Iowa, and began serving in 1939.
Secondary orality is a concept in the work of scholar Walter J. Ong, as first described in book form with his publication of Rhetoric, Romance, and Technology: Studies in the Interaction of Expression and Culture. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1971:'' "Secondary orality is founded on—though it departs from—the individualized introversion of the age of writing, print, and rationalism which intervened between it and primary orality and which remains as part of us. History is deposited permanently, but not inalterably, as personality structure."(chapter 12, paragraph 2) However, for many years before Ong started using the terms primary orality and secondary orality, he had used the expressions primarily oral culture and secondarily oral culture.
Birt saw that the breakthrough in understanding the practice of line-counting led to a cascade of insights about the way ancient publishers paid ancient scribes (by the line), about the way ancient authors cited each other's works (by the line), and about the kinds of formats and editions used in antiquity. As Hermann Alexander Diels said, > The investigations of the recently deceased Charles Graux, taken all too > early from the world of scholarship, have made it henceforth inalterably > certain that the standard line (the stichos) of the ancients was a unit of > spatial length equal to the hexameter. Theodor Birt has rightly erected his > shrewd and persuasive The Nature of the Ancient Book upon this foundation.H. > Diels, 'Stichometrisches,' Hermes, vol.

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