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Showing results for inalienable. Search instead for inalienabilitie.
Definitions

inalienable

[in-eyl-yuh-nuh-buhl, -ey-lee-uh-] / ɪnˈeɪl yə nə bəl, -ˈeɪ li ə- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The Constitutional Court said the Nama had an inalienable right to their ancestral land and the rights to the minerals there.

From BBC

“Receiving food is an inalienable right. You’re born on Earth, there’s enough food here to feed everyone. It’s a distribution problem,” Ms Miller says.

From BBC

"An inalienable right should not be made conditional," the report adds.

From BBC

The Indian ministry has said that labelling the jewels as "duplicates" is misleading and that these relics make up the "inalienable religious and cultural heritage" of India.

From BBC

Our history is marked by many instances in which people’s inalienable rights have been violated or when they were targeted in spite of their adherence to and belief in our “civil religion.”

From Salon