unseparable

English

Etymology

From Middle English unseperable, equivalent to un- + separable.

Adjective

unseparable (comparative more unseparable, superlative most unseparable)

  1. Not separable; inseparable
    • 1970, Proceedings: VI Interamerican Seminar on Cosmic Rays:
      Thus cosmic ray studies have merged into astrophysics and become unseperable part of high energy astrophysics.
    • 1988, Kashinath Rao Mukpalkar, My Experiences, My Views:
      Under the Hindu Law, especially in Brahmins, the marriages are performed as "Sanskar" and the relations between wife and husband, once married, are unseperable, unless in certain circumstances divorce is obtained from the Court, which seldom occurs, whereas in others, it is a contract marriage.
    • 1994, B. M. Jain, Nuclear politics in South Asia:
      Also, there is an unseperable linkage between arms control and regional politics.
    • 1996, Charles Malamoud, Cooking the World:
      Indian ideology, or fantasy, wishing to go even further, came to imagine a place where one could simultaneously be both in the village and in the forest, and lead a life whose village and forest aspects were unseperable.
    • 2000, Lori Justice, Searching Jodie's Eyes:
      Months pass, Jimmy and I had become unseperable, I thought . . . Until one day Mom said that we would have to move closer to town, so she wouldn't have to slide so far to work everyday.
    • 2000, Eurasian Studies - Issues 17-20 - Page 32:
      Straits are an indivisible and unseperable territory of Turkey like Erzurum, Ankara, Izmir etc.
    • 2006, David Nadelberg, Mortified:
      Adam and I were unseperable at one time. Then, for some dumb reason I got sick of him, now we're back I think.
    • 2014, Jack Burbank, Padanaram Village:
      The two had been unseperable.
    • 2016, Sameer, Trek to the Final Destination:
      As days passed Sidd and Aachal seemed unseperable and since their parents were also in favour of this match the two were to get engaged in a month's time.

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