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单词 inseparable
释义

Definition of inseparable in English:

inseparable

adjective ɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)lɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • 1Unable to be separated or treated separately.

    不可分的;不可区别对待的

    research and higher education seem inseparable

    研究和高等教育似乎不可分。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It is the language of someone who recognizes that the quest for a spiritual dimension in cultural life is inseparable from the moral priorities of the individual.
    • The growth of civil society is inseparable from the efforts and role of educated citizens, which historically become the backbone of a democratic society.
    • Shelly's identification with work is inseparable from Grand Isle.
    • ‘Those assets should be included in the city budget… they are inseparable from the financial status of the city,’ he said.
    • Benevolence inflames the anger of the young men of the cités as much as repression, because their rage is inseparable from their being.
    • So the martial arts are a great way to dish out a bit of punishment, with a heavy hand if required, but the spiritual dimension to the sport is inseparable from the principal aim of the fight: to knock down your opponent.
    • The winner of seven consecutive Order of Merits between 1993 and 1999 maintains that he would not have achieved so much without the volatility that is inseparable from his desire to win.
    • Today, literary style is often inseparable from self-advertising, and ends up as a knowing technique which processes and imprints everything which it comes into contact.
    • Monopoly capitalism, in this sense, was inseparable from interimperialist rivalry, manifested primarily in the form of a struggle for global markets.
    • Mann may or may not have thought this himself, but he certainly felt that the pursuit of difficulty renewed the passions, and he knew that for him it was inseparable from ‘this phenomenon of life’.
    • Kennan's name is inseparable from the doctrine of containment that influenced American foreign policy throughout the Cold War.
    • Or, as he also puts it, ‘the urge to tell [movie] stories is inseparable from the wish to make money.’
    • These meanings attract powerful emotions and can affect the patient's clinical condition and become inseparable from the individual's life history.
    • Anti-Communism, they argued, and argued successfully, was inseparable from liberalism.
    • If the dry land is inseparable from the wet, then the East Coast is where the government's new foreshore and seabed law is going to hurt most, like a bomb in a crowded room.
    • If they are historically informed, language sceptics may claim that this process of extinction is nothing new, perhaps inseparable from the human condition.
    • Moreover, in true Yorkshire speech, the accent is inseparable from the dialect - though not many would be willing to practise the dialect today, even if they were familiar with the phraseology.
    • And upon questioning from the committee, he said that the values of Inuit are virtually inseparable from those of the Christian faith.
    • Unlike Christianity or Judaism, Islam's religious history is inseparable from its conquests - which is why the concept of holy war lives on today.
    • And it is central as well to (and perhaps inseparable from) the question of genre.
    Synonyms
    indivisible, indissoluble, inextricable, entangled, ravelled, mixed up, impossible to separate
    the same, one and the same
    1. 1.1 (of people) unwilling to be separated; very close.
      (一人或多人)不愿分开的;常在一起的
      they met 18 months ago and have been inseparable ever since

      他们18个月前相遇,自此就形影不离了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They're like brothers, inseparable brothers.
      • Apart from a self-imposed, 18-month split in 1973, the couple were inseparable from the time they met in 1966.
      • Nicholas added: ‘We thought it was amazing but we have been inseparable ever since.’
      • They met when they served in the army during the Second World War and were inseparable from then on, despite the vile prejudice (and the criminalisation of their love) that they had to confront.
      • Miriam follows her even after she covers herself in gas and stalks away, and after that they are inseparable, Miriam having promised herself that she will never leave Eunice.
      • Soon they are inseparable and their relationship becomes more intimate.
      • Bree and I had met in 1st grade and ever since then we have been inseparable.
      • By the end of our second day at Columbia Lake, my roommates and I had met our neighbours from next door, and we've been inseparable ever since.
      • His wife Buakhieo, 34, was a waitress in a restaurant in Thailand when the pair met and they have been inseparable ever since.
      • The pair became engrossed in conversation and have been inseparable ever since.
      • We have all been inseparable; I mean people get us mixed up even though we look nothing alike.
      • The pair were inseparable from birth and often used to play tricks on their various sets of foster parents who could never tell them apart.
      • His family had moved from the other side of town when he and Tristan were four, just starting kindergarten, and those two had been inseparable ever since.
      • You two were always so close, nearly inseparable at times.
      • They were an inseparable pair whose views complemented each other's work.
      • For his first dozen movies, he was inseparable from producer Alan Marshall, but they have not worked together since Angel Heart in 1987.
      • They have been inseparable ever since and Alan proposed on the very spot they met just three months later.
      • However, despite being inseparable during high school, Enid and Rebecca begin to drift apart as their maturing life goals take them in different directions.
      • I met up with him on the beach after the incident and we've been inseparable ever since.
      • Lin and Lydie, though they'd had a strong relationship from the beginning, grew so close they were practically inseparable.
      Synonyms
      devoted, bosom, close, fast, firm, good, best, intimate, confidential, boon, constant, loyal, faithful
      informal as thick as thieves
  • 2Grammar
    (of a prefix) not used as a separate word or (in German) not separated from the base verb when inflected.

    〔语法〕(前缀)不可单独成词的;(德语)屈折变化时与词根不可分的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Hence, verbs with the inseparable prefix ge- in their infinitive forms do not add an additional ge- in the past participle.
    1. 2.1 (of a German verb) consisting of a prefix and a base verb which are not separated when inflected, for example wiederholen.
      〔语法〕(德语动词)屈折变化时前缀和词根不可分的(如wiederholen)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Note that the verb anerkennen 'to recognize/acknowledge' is used both as a separable verb and (less commonly) as an inseparable verb.
noun ɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)lɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • A person or thing inseparable from another.

    不能分开的人(或事物)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We are two good old enemies, Edith and I, inseparables, in fact.

Derivatives

  • inseparability

  • noun ɪnsɛp(ə)rəˈbɪlətiˌɪnˌsɛp(ə)rəˈbɪlədi
    • Whether I did or not, to him it is irrelevant, even though it is the most glaring example of the inseparability of matters political and personal.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Love is the inseparability of all life everywhere in the cosmos, and today's science is telling us that we are actually inseparably one.
      • In practice, that inseparability means that discussion in the body of the text focuses on the historical and social at the expense of any substantial consideration of the aesthetic or material qualities of the works of art.
      • It forced me to acknowledge the inseparability of the coded world and the creative, expressive world.
      • Whether he is celebrating museums or apples and oranges, silver and gold or light and water, poem after poem explores the inseparability of art and life.
  • inseparably

  • adverb ɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəbliɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəbli
    • And all of us see these aspects of our lives as inseparably and systematically related; in other words, class is always gendered and raced.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There is probably no other centre in Ireland where harbour and town are so inseparably bound up and complement each other so well.
      • The issue of social justice, economic freedom, ecological balance, and non-violent communication are all inseparably one.
      • The two Narayans worked closely, inseparably, from 1960 to 1976.
      • Viewing the visual contents of the snapshot is usually perceived as viewing those things themselves, as these are deeply and inseparably connected.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin inseparabilis, from in- 'not' + separabilis (see separable).

Definition of inseparable in US English:

inseparable

adjectiveɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)linˈsep(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • 1Unable to be separated or treated separately.

    不可分的;不可区别对待的

    research and higher education seem inseparable

    研究和高等教育似乎不可分。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The growth of civil society is inseparable from the efforts and role of educated citizens, which historically become the backbone of a democratic society.
    • It is the language of someone who recognizes that the quest for a spiritual dimension in cultural life is inseparable from the moral priorities of the individual.
    • So the martial arts are a great way to dish out a bit of punishment, with a heavy hand if required, but the spiritual dimension to the sport is inseparable from the principal aim of the fight: to knock down your opponent.
    • ‘Those assets should be included in the city budget… they are inseparable from the financial status of the city,’ he said.
    • Moreover, in true Yorkshire speech, the accent is inseparable from the dialect - though not many would be willing to practise the dialect today, even if they were familiar with the phraseology.
    • Mann may or may not have thought this himself, but he certainly felt that the pursuit of difficulty renewed the passions, and he knew that for him it was inseparable from ‘this phenomenon of life’.
    • And upon questioning from the committee, he said that the values of Inuit are virtually inseparable from those of the Christian faith.
    • Unlike Christianity or Judaism, Islam's religious history is inseparable from its conquests - which is why the concept of holy war lives on today.
    • Monopoly capitalism, in this sense, was inseparable from interimperialist rivalry, manifested primarily in the form of a struggle for global markets.
    • The winner of seven consecutive Order of Merits between 1993 and 1999 maintains that he would not have achieved so much without the volatility that is inseparable from his desire to win.
    • Kennan's name is inseparable from the doctrine of containment that influenced American foreign policy throughout the Cold War.
    • And it is central as well to (and perhaps inseparable from) the question of genre.
    • Or, as he also puts it, ‘the urge to tell [movie] stories is inseparable from the wish to make money.’
    • Shelly's identification with work is inseparable from Grand Isle.
    • These meanings attract powerful emotions and can affect the patient's clinical condition and become inseparable from the individual's life history.
    • Benevolence inflames the anger of the young men of the cités as much as repression, because their rage is inseparable from their being.
    • If the dry land is inseparable from the wet, then the East Coast is where the government's new foreshore and seabed law is going to hurt most, like a bomb in a crowded room.
    • Anti-Communism, they argued, and argued successfully, was inseparable from liberalism.
    • If they are historically informed, language sceptics may claim that this process of extinction is nothing new, perhaps inseparable from the human condition.
    • Today, literary style is often inseparable from self-advertising, and ends up as a knowing technique which processes and imprints everything which it comes into contact.
    Synonyms
    indivisible, indissoluble, inextricable, entangled, ravelled, mixed up, impossible to separate
    1. 1.1 (of one or more people) unwilling to be separated; usually seen together.
      (一人或多人)不愿分开的;常在一起的
      they met 18 months ago and have been inseparable ever since

      他们18个月前相遇,自此就形影不离了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • For his first dozen movies, he was inseparable from producer Alan Marshall, but they have not worked together since Angel Heart in 1987.
      • His wife Buakhieo, 34, was a waitress in a restaurant in Thailand when the pair met and they have been inseparable ever since.
      • Lin and Lydie, though they'd had a strong relationship from the beginning, grew so close they were practically inseparable.
      • They were an inseparable pair whose views complemented each other's work.
      • His family had moved from the other side of town when he and Tristan were four, just starting kindergarten, and those two had been inseparable ever since.
      • The pair were inseparable from birth and often used to play tricks on their various sets of foster parents who could never tell them apart.
      • Apart from a self-imposed, 18-month split in 1973, the couple were inseparable from the time they met in 1966.
      • Bree and I had met in 1st grade and ever since then we have been inseparable.
      • Soon they are inseparable and their relationship becomes more intimate.
      • However, despite being inseparable during high school, Enid and Rebecca begin to drift apart as their maturing life goals take them in different directions.
      • They're like brothers, inseparable brothers.
      • They met when they served in the army during the Second World War and were inseparable from then on, despite the vile prejudice (and the criminalisation of their love) that they had to confront.
      • By the end of our second day at Columbia Lake, my roommates and I had met our neighbours from next door, and we've been inseparable ever since.
      • Nicholas added: ‘We thought it was amazing but we have been inseparable ever since.’
      • I met up with him on the beach after the incident and we've been inseparable ever since.
      • We have all been inseparable; I mean people get us mixed up even though we look nothing alike.
      • The pair became engrossed in conversation and have been inseparable ever since.
      • Miriam follows her even after she covers herself in gas and stalks away, and after that they are inseparable, Miriam having promised herself that she will never leave Eunice.
      • They have been inseparable ever since and Alan proposed on the very spot they met just three months later.
      • You two were always so close, nearly inseparable at times.
      Synonyms
      devoted, bosom, close, fast, firm, good, best, intimate, confidential, boon, constant, loyal, faithful
    2. 1.2Grammar (of a prefix) not used as a separate word or (in German) not separated from the base verb when inflected.
      〔语法〕(前缀)不可单独成词的;(德语)屈折变化时与词根不可分的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Hence, verbs with the inseparable prefix ge- in their infinitive forms do not add an additional ge- in the past participle.
nounɪnˈsɛp(ə)rəb(ə)linˈsep(ə)rəb(ə)l
  • A person or thing inseparable from another.

    不能分开的人(或事物)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We are two good old enemies, Edith and I, inseparables, in fact.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin inseparabilis, from in- ‘not’ + separabilis (see separable).

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更新时间:2024/12/27 17:12:56