abiding, creating, hard, infinite, long-lived, of long duration, regular, steely, uncompromising, unmalleable, unwinking
Definitionadj. not subject or susceptible to change or variation in form or quality or nature
Last update: March 19, 2017
2
Dress code in college was an immutable decision. [adjective]
0
There 's no immutable law that the powerful should always call the tune. [adjective]
0
That is, it is an ordering of the elements which is descriptive of an immutable essence. [adjective]
0
The actions of men are subject to general immutable laws expressed in statistics. [adjective]
0
God alone is immutable, because he is eternal. [adjective]
0
So it would be were it not for the law of inertia, as immutable a force in men and nations as in inanimate bodies. [adjective]
0
All of them are more or less convinced that the existing order is immutable, because--the chief consideration--it is to their advantage. [adjective]
0
As Ananke, Tyche assumes quite another character, and becomes the embodiment of those immutable laws of nature, by which certain causes produce certain inevitable results. [adjective]
0
The permanent and the immutable are persistent. [adjective]
0
Victor Lebrun objected; and his decrees were as immutable as those of Fate. [adjective]
0
This problem he proceeded to develop in various works, until in his Scienza nuova he arrived at a more complete solution, which may be formulated as follows: If the principle of justice and law be one, eternal and immutable, why should there be so many different codes of legislation? [Please select]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!