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Definitions

immemorial

[im-uh-mawr-ee-uhl, -mohr-] / ˌɪm əˈmɔr i əl, -ˈmoʊr- /


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.

Centering the connections between land, water and people is inherent to how coastal Tribes and First Nations have stewarded this sea since time immemorial, without artificial colonial borders.

From Seattle Times

Drawing on Native oral histories—including the Lakota tradition that the tribe has had a relationship with the horse “since time immemorial”—Collin argued that the horse never went extinct in the Americas at all.

From Science Magazine

"Tribes have been on the landscape since time immemorial," says Tullos.

From Salon

The preamble was to have acknowledged that Indigenous Australians had inhabited the country “since time immemorial” and were “honored for their ancient and continuing cultures.”

From Seattle Times

At some moment in time immemorial, emerging from some creature, that sound must have been made: A voice was being used to make drama, and — eons before 16th-century Italy — opera was truly born.

From New York Times