He said: We, the citizens of the world, have an inviolable right to live. [adverb]
3
Liberty is inviolable. [adjective]
3
The laws of Newton are inviolable. [adverb]
2
It 's the oldest and most inviolable law of science, logic and reason. [verb]
0
She was not afraid for him; he seemed to her inviolable and invulnerable; but her whole soul shuddered at the deed which he was steeling himself to perpetrate. [adjective]
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Whereas, if the oath which he accounted inviolable was once publicly known, no party with whom he might have occasion to contract would have rested satisfied with any other. [adjective]
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In principle, property is inviolable, but it can and must be checked and disciplined. [adjective]
0
My liberty, which is sacred, needs for its objective action an instrument which we call the body: the body participates then in the sacredness of liberty; it is then inviolable. [adjective]
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