immutable

IPA: ɪmjˈutʌbʌɫ

noun

  • Something that cannot be changed.

adjective

  • Unable to be changed without exception.
  • (programming, of a variable) Not able to be altered in the memory after its value is set initially.
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Examples of "immutable" in Sentences

  • Even space, seemingly immutable, is able to be truncated by circumstance.
  • But let us step back further: must stage-genres remain immutable, bounded wholes, or are they subject to transformation?
  • Your argument that science hadn’t proven homosexuality to be immutable is fallacious for obvious reasons, science can’t prove a negative!
  • JPG: Your argument that science hadn’t proven homosexuality to be immutable is fallacious for obvious reasons, science can’t prove a negative!
  • The fact that the Senate Rules tend to be immutable is a function of the six year term and that only one-third up for reelection every two years.
  • Far from respecting certain immutable forms, each new book tends to constitute the laws of its functioning at the same time that it produces their destruction.
  • Martin, who has established certain immutable rules for his transporter business, manages to break every single one again, just as he’s done in his previous films.
  • Bringing it back to the metals it’s no wonder that gold continues to move up so quickly (even when over bought) as no chart can tell you that the assumptions used to decipher it are no longer relevant and by what’s happening in rest of the economy taking these assumptions as valid and immutable is reckless at best.

Related Links

synonyms for immutabledescribing words for immutable
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