How to Use unchangeable in a Sentence
unchangeable
adjective- I'm afraid that my opinion on this matter is unchangeable.
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In this view, while the past is fixed and unchangeable, the future is open.
— Quanta Magazine, 19 July 2016 -
That’s a function of where they’re born, and seems to be unchangeable after childhood.
— Alex Hutchinson, Outside Online, 27 Mar. 2022 -
An unchangeable trust may not be the best option in a world that’s constantly changing.
— Liz Weston, oregonlive, 14 May 2022 -
The smoke from burning meat — for tacos or burgers or shawarma — is an unchangeable part of the weather report.
— Julissa Jamesstaff Writer, Los Angeles Times, 15 Nov. 2022 -
In Trump's view, gender is an unchangeable fact defined by the genitalia you are born with.
— Macaela MacKenzie, Glamour, 15 Dec. 2018 -
Liz did what most people would do when faced with a seemingly unchangeable fact about a new friend’s baby.
— Jen Gann, The Cut, 21 July 2017 -
The prevailing belief was that the adult brain was completely formed and unchangeable.
— Samantha Boardman, Marie Claire, 26 Mar. 2019 -
If your sister plans to continue, however, the issue isn’t just about the past, which is unchangeable, but about the future, which isn’t.
— New York Times, 19 Jan. 2021 -
The mass killing of animals via heatstroke should not be accepted as an unchangeable fact.
— Crystal Heath, The Mercury News, 10 Feb. 2024 -
There are times that life takes unexpected sharp turns and the fabric of society, and what was once tolerated as unchangeable, get thrown to the side.
— Erik Sherman, Forbes, 3 June 2021 -
Such a system would essentially bind the hands of central bankers, like Ulysses on his mast, so that the money supply expands in a predictable and unchangeable fashion.
— Korok Ray, Forbes, 16 Mar. 2023 -
NFTs are virtual items that use blockchain technology and smart contracts to assure each item is unique and unchangeable. .
— Khristopher J. Brooks, CBS News, 28 Apr. 2022 -
Even more powerful in the future, Ms. Wright said, is the combination of AI and blockchain, a ledger system where data could be encrypted and unchangeable.
— Sara Castellanos, WSJ, 14 Mar. 2019 -
In fact, research has shown that some trainings suggest unconscious bias is an unchangeable fact of life and imply it can therefore be ignored.
— Jennifer R. Grandis, The Conversation, 31 Mar. 2023 -
The data stored on a blockchain is permanent and cannot be altered, ensuring that the ownership and history of an NFT are secure and unchangeable.
— William Anderson, Forbes, 18 Dec. 2022 -
This is one unchangeable fact, Corcoran believes, that knows no borders.
— Stuart Miller, Los Angeles Times, 17 Oct. 2022 -
Playing in high school or watching from the bench, a new player can forget one unchangeable fact about college football: The dominant emotion of the game is not excitement.
— Zach Helfand, latimes.com, 2 Sep. 2017 -
Each token is generated by a smart contract, which is unique, unchangeable and forever linked to a specific work of art.
— NBC News, 27 Oct. 2020 -
For that matter, just because scientists can see these associations in the brain does not mean these judgments are unchangeable.
— Z Paige Lerario, Scientific American, 19 Sep. 2022 -
The company has also put controls into the app, such as the capability to make certain data fields unchangeable after certain stages of the work are done.
— J.d. Morris, SFChronicle.com, 3 Sep. 2019 -
Maybe the volume is declared unchangeable, set by corporate overseers.
— Joyce Cohen, Twin Cities, 22 June 2019 -
The online public ledger creates a permanent and unchangeable record of transactions.
— Nell Lewis, CNN, 5 June 2019 -
The data, encrypted and unchangeable, is always up to date on all participants’ systems.
— Sara Castellanos, WSJ, 29 May 2019 -
The data, encrypted and unchangeable, is always up-to-date on all participants’ systems.
— Sara Castellanos, WSJ, 23 Apr. 2020 -
The relative stability of the annual number of fatal shootings does not mean the total is unchangeable.
— Washington Post, 9 Feb. 2022 -
In doing so, the database becomes effectively unchangeable, and can also cut out the middle man in some applications.
— Lucinda Shen, Fortune, 29 May 2018 -
Previously, scientists thought the frequency of whale songs was controlled by the size of certain resonating chambers, making the pitch of a whale song an unchangeable part of the whale's biology.
— Avery Thompson, Popular Mechanics, 24 Aug. 2017 -
It’s a core value of the publication that is unchangeable, and that above all protects our ability to do independent journalism.
— Washington Post, 15 Jan. 2021 -
But the most unchangeable feature of life in Congress in recent years has been how profoundly unpopular the institution has become and remained.
— Ed Kilgore, Daily Intelligencer, 2 Feb. 2018
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unchangeable.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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