English to Malayalam Dictionary indivisible

indivisible

വിഭജിക്കാനും
definition
adjective
privilege was indivisible from responsibility
unable to be divided or separated.
example
‘This is women's work ’, he announces before explaining that responsibility for such chores is 'indivisible' within a functional household.
He saw how cinema, music and street style were 'indivisible' .
But it suits Nationalists and unionists alike to maintain the fiction of an 'indivisible' UK health service.
Free speech is a universal freedom, and it is 'indivisible' .
Although at one time it was correct to describe the Crown as one and 'indivisible' , with the development of the Commonwealth this is no longer so.
First, although it contains two distinct and separate rules, it is treated as a single 'indivisible' influence.
For the author, politics and the personal are 'indivisible' .
We remain 'indivisible' despite their attempts to divide Americans through their relentless warfare against class, ethnic and religious unity.
There was a time when honesty was thought of as 'indivisible' : you were either honest or you were not.
The sovereign power is 'indivisible' ; it cannot for instance be divided between king and parliament.
Today art is 'indivisible' from culture, culture from heritage, heritage from tourism.
Illusions and allusions to concepts of truth and impartiality, far from 'indivisible' concepts, have always figured prominently in British political propaganda.
The Atomic Theory explains both propositions if it is assumed that atoms are 'indivisible' and form complexes in fixed ratios.
Each of the short stories in Dubliners concludes with a showing that manifests the integrity and 'indivisible' nature of some momentary ‘triviality,’ as Joyce calls it.
He brooked no rivals, anointed no successors and developed a cult of personality that was 'indivisible' from his people's hopes.
Whether or not one agrees with the political position of the party is not the point, but freedom of speech is 'indivisible' : you have it or you do not.
We have arrived by degrees at a conception of space as a singular three-dimensional entity which is, ontologically speaking, a simple and 'indivisible' whole.
In the end, for all we have learned about his art, Caravaggio the artist and Caravaggio the man remain 'indivisible' .
The last sequence is of course the sequence of prime numbers, the 'indivisible' numbers that can only be divided by themselves and one.
Although the dominions became equal partners in the British Commonwealth, the Crown remained 'indivisible' .
Happily for men like this, their view of the constitution is 'indivisible' from their view of their own self-interest.
I got sick to the back teeth hearing about America is the greatest nation on earth, especially in the context of equality and 'indivisibility' .
For one afternoon, at least, it was grievously simple: Britons and Americans gathered, 'indivisibly' , to mourn a shared massacre.
Connected with this issue is the debate contrasting 'indivisibility' (all human rights are equal in importance) with hierarchy (some rights are more important than others).
While addressing the convention, he said further that the biggest challenge before the country was to maintain the unity and 'indivisibility' .
All of these things are 'indivisibly' associated with spending money.
Here they are bound 'indivisibly' by a set of ideas.
However, I think that narrative is 'indivisibly' fused with the theoretical enterprise, for several reasons.
As can be seen, the recurring theme of the principle is universality, non-exclusivity, non-discrimination, and 'indivisibility' .
Global warming too easily serves as a metaphor for our common humanity and the 'indivisibility' of the species in a fragmented world.
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