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"unbreachable" Definitions
  1. not able to be entered, penetrated, or crossed : impossible to breach

32 Sentences With "unbreachable"

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

In endeavouring first and foremost to be unbreachable, Portugal made themselves unwatchable, too.
That Berkshire made losing bets on firms with apparently unbreachable moats shows the difficulty of foresight.
Like unbreachable blister packs or awkward sticky tape, paper jams suggest that imperfection will persist, despite our best efforts.
L2TP with a pre-shared key for authentication can be decrypted for instance, destroying the concept of the unbreachable tunnel.
For many in the audience, the 1960s generation gap is still the unbreachable dividing line between civilization and the wild.
" As a result, he says, in Vancouver and cities like it, excessive immigration has created "an unbreachable affordability barrier for many families.
The prime minister has often demonstrated willingness to confront the British political class and European leaders with supposedly unbreachable lines only to find flexibility.
While Cuomo acknowledges that he can't guarantee that IBM's blockchain service is unbreachable, he says the company has taken some serious safeguards to protect it.
At its heart, for all its talk of sailing ships and barren crags, the distance Cliff explores best is the at times unbreachable one that divides people.
Only women can really call up memories like the ones the Kavanaugh hearing is resurrecting — of a double standard so unbreachable Trump's imaginary wall pales in comparison.
Never before has the seemingly unbreachable divide between the old classic of the Games, Alpine skiing, and the popular modern sport of snowboarding been breached by an athlete winning gold in both.
Since the start of Europe's migration crisis in 2015, the English Channel has largely been seen as an unbreachable barrier, its shifting currents and volatile weather making any attempt to cross too dangerous.
Previously "K and C" had ranked as an unbreachable Tory citadel and a byword for urbane Conservatism, represented by such prominent MPs as the late Alan Clark, a political diarist, and Michael Portillo, a former defence secretary.
Luther Strange of Alabama, bolster the idea that President Donald Trump enjoys an unbreachable shield from fellow Republicans as Congress and a Justice Department special counsel conduct their investigations on Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential race.
They will also be remembered for an almost unbreachable back three of Giorgio Chiellini, Leonardo Bonucci and Andrea Barzagli, and the terrifying sight of Conte roaring that he would "kill" his players if they didn't get back into position.
As the two countries battle for global technological leadership, China's prowess in and practices around the areas of artificial intelligence, robotics, 5G and semiconductor chips have become what some have characterized as potentially unbreachable hurdles in the trade talks.
There is no need to preserve a body that has no distance to travel before burial, but preparing the dead by pickling them and sealing them in boxes made of hardwoods and unbreachable metals turned out to be a good business: the denial of decay.
" Luigi Zingales, professor of entrepreneurship and finance at the University of Chicago, wrote that the sharp increase in profits reflects Warren Buffett's investment dictum: "I look for economic castles protected by unbreachable 'moats' " — profits have risen "because firms became better at creating product differentiation and erecting barriers to entry.
Mr. Peralta's defection does more than siphon power from the Democratic conference; it puts the independent group in position to expand its sphere of influence, pulling Republicans toward the political middle and offering John J. Flanagan, the Senate's Republican leader, an unbreachable bulwark against liberal policies favored by the Democrats who dominate the State Assembly.
On the journey back, I brooded on the probability that I would never feel quite the same about the home I had created, for while I knew a hundred teenagers had conducted a bacchanal there, the fact that I didn't witness it seemed to create an unbreachable dissociation, a feeling of separation that I was surprised to discover caused me a degree of relief.
Both these truths work to enwrap the book in an aura at once mysterious and almost unbreachable.
The participation of officials and plain citizens in so large numbers aimed at manifesting a unified and unbreachable citizen body, consisting of free citizens.
Tracy, pp. 55–56. This willful ignorance of Buffy's vocation has been well-analyzed by Buffy studies scholars. A persistent theme in Buffy is the nearly unbreachable generation gap between adolescents and adults. Throughout the series, adults are either unable or unwilling to see the genuine horrors teenagers face.
In 1992, during the Beef Tribunal, the Supreme Court ruled that, as the constitution stood, the confidentiality of meetings of the Government (the cabinet) was unbreachable and absolute. The court derived its ruling from Article 28.4.2º, which requires that the Government observe the principle of collective responsibility. The purpose of the Seventeenth Amendment was to allow cabinet confidentiality to be relaxed in certain circumstances.
The first caused minor structural damage to the concrete support of a water pipeline between Lake Vyrnwy and Liverpool. The second targeted a Liverpool Corporation viaduct at the Chester-Warrington railway crossing. The site employed full- time security and had been described as "unbreachable", but the MAC explosive device was successfully detonated, causing the pipeline to shatter. The actions of the MAC have been credited by some as a major factor in the increased support for Plaid Cymru in elections during the period.
To find out more, Tony disguises himself as a spark plug salesman to get an inside look at Brink's large and so-called "impregnable fortress" headquarters in the city's North End. The company had been thought to have unbreachable security as a private "bank" throughout the East Coast. Once inside, Tony realizes that Brink's is anything but a fortress and that employees treat the money "like garbage." Still wary of Brink's public image, Tony breaks in one night after casing the building.
Kōsa , also known as Hongan-ji Kennyo (本願寺 顕如), was the 11th head of the Hongan-ji in Kyoto, and Chief Abbot of Ishiyama Hongan-ji, cathedral fortress of the Ikkō-ikki (Buddhist warrior monks and peasants who opposed samurai rule), during its siege at the end of the Sengoku period. He engineered many alliances, and organized the defenses of the cathedral to the point that most at the time considered Ishiyama Hongan-ji to be unbreachable.
Accordingly, out of the eight shamanic narratives recited during the funeral, the Song is both the most ritually important and the most popular among the worshippers. Its two central figures are the most venerated among all of the invoked gods, and were even worshipped as second to the Buddha in Buddhist temples in South Hamgyong. In the context of the funeral, an important purpose of the narrative is to demonstrate the unbreachable gap between the living and the dead. In all versions of the myth, Cheongjeong-gaksi undergoes excruciating torment.
German propaganda, both at home and abroad, repeatedly portrayed the Westwall during its construction as an unbreachable bulwark. At the start of the war, the opposing troops remained behind their own defence lines. As a morale booster for British troops marching off to France, the Siegfried Line was the subject of a popular song: "We're Going to Hang out the Washing on the Siegfried Line". A French version by Ray Ventura (« On ira pendre notre linge sur la ligne Siegfried ») met a great success during the Phoney War (« Drôle de guerre »).
In the majority of versions, the woman ultimately commits suicide or otherwise dies to be reunited with her husband for good in the afterlife. Dorang-seonbi and Cheongjeong-gaksi were worshipped in the Mangmuk-gut as eminent gods who paved the road on which the deceased soul would travel to the afterlife. In the funeral context, the Song demonstrated the unbreachable gap between the living and the dead, but also suggested that shamanic ritual could lead to a brief reunion with the dead. Scholars have focused on the myth's Buddhist influences, and especially on its relationships to Neo-Confucian patriarchy.
Henrietta is a work of domestic fiction, providing an outline for what is expected within the social realms of its contemporary society. Despite being a novel, it serves as a practical manual for English middle class readers. For example, Book I of Henrietta, which recounts the protagonist's familial trials and somewhat complicated standing within the class hierarchy, demonstrates the struggle of intermingling between classes. Writer and literary scholar Elizabeth Langland argues that given the historical context of these works, a successful romance between a working class woman and a middle-class man is “un narratable.” Such seemingly unbreachable social boundaries are abundant in Lennox's text.
Also, fortifications as impressive as Hadrian's Wall were not unbreachable: with milecastles some distance apart and patrols infrequent, small enemy forces would have been able to penetrate the defenses easily for small-scale raiding. However, a raiding party would be forced to fight its way through one of the well-defended gates, abandon its loot, such as cattle, thus negating the whole purpose of the raid or be trapped against the wall by the responding legions. Additionally, a large army would have been able to force a crossing of the limes using siege equipment. The value of the limes lay not in its absolute impenetrability but, as S. Thomas Parker argues, in its hindrance to the enemy: granting a delay or warning that could be used to summon concentrated Roman forces to the site.

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