Inviolate in a sentence as an adjective

You're further along than I am. I read that the UN headquarters were declared 'inviolate', but don't recall where.

We only have a very firm belief that causality is inviolate.

Since the state itself has ruled it has no constitutional duty to protect, then the contract is inviolate, and long since void.

The United Nations seat is where it is because it is agreed that this is extraterritorial and inviolate.

While the regimes aren't inviolate, Congressional action would probably be required to change the status quo. Besides that, the fact that you can reimagine the legal rules doesn't change the philosophical and political positions that led to the existing status quo.

It is actually hard to imagine how the UK could have made this situation much worse ... oh ... wait ... yes, they could've stormed the sovereign and inviolate territory of the Ecuadorian Embassy!

At the same time, she did write things like:Intercourse is the pure, sterile, formal expression of men's contempt for womenOr:A human being has a body that is inviolate; and when it is violated, it is abused.

Just because someone calls a record of development "history" doesn't make it inviolate, and quite frankly, as a maintainer, I don't care about every little sneeze that a developer had on a project.

The right of property in its\nwidest sense, including all possession, including all rights and\nprivileges, and hence embracing the right to an inviolate personality,\naffords alone that broad basis upon which the protection which the\nindividual demands can be rested.

The right of property in its widest sense, including all possession, including all rights and privileges, and hence embracing the right to an inviolate personality, affords alone that broad basis upon which the protection which the individual demands can be rested.

Inviolate definitions

adjective

(of a woman) having the hymen unbroken; "she was intact, virginal"

See also: intact

adjective

must be kept sacred

See also: inviolable sacrosanct