Inextricable in a sentence as an adjective

And the nature of the work, well, is inextricable from being on a computer

Their agenda was much more complex, and as we found out, was inextricable from that of the US State Department.

I think the problem is that the terrible shell semantics are inextricable from the larger semantics of using Unix.

"Soon enough, almost all human activity and the Internet will be inextricable.

Competition is an inextricable part of life, and military force still trumps most other forms of competition as a last resort.

What you're seeing is simply that at scale, politics is inextricable from tech+business, just as, at scale, business is inextricable from tech.

The "experience" at the Apple store is definitely one of the decisions that are inextricable from Apple's overall success.

Let's put it this way: a "meritocratic" society has made intelligence inextricable from wealth and power in a way that was not true 100 years ago or earlier.

"Advertising is an inextricable part of the global economy.

Advertising is an inextricable part of the global economy.

I don't think this is controversial; an object is the same thing, in essence, except that due to language implementations and semantics, there are additional layers of complexity that are inherent and inextricable.

The geographical limitation is inextricable from the copyright limitation.

The internet: where anonymous speech is an inextricable part of free speech when complaining about drug enforcement on reddit, but an unnecessary uncumberance on democracy when releasing a movie criticising a Presidential candidate.

Where exactly was an explicit insistence on using gendered pronouns ever stated?How would an insistence on using gendered pronouns automatically equal a belief in an inextricable link between software and masculinity?Don't you realize that considering empathy as an engineering value is offensive to sociopathic engineers?

Inextricable definitions

adjective

not permitting extrication; incapable of being disentangled or untied; "an inextricable knot"; "inextricable unity"