The infant whom Hannah had clutched to her breast, the woman, her sister, whom Janet had seen that day were one--immutably one.
When the court was most French, most artificial, most vicious, the citizen life must have remained immutably German, dull, and kind.
It was all picturesque, and within-doors there was the novelty of the meagre carpets and stalwart furniture of the Germans, and their beds, which after so many ages of Anglo-Saxon satire remain immutably preposterous.
There, far as the remotest line That bounds imagination's flight, Countless and unending orbs In mazy motion intermingled, Yet still fulfilled immutably 75 Eternal Nature's law.
Whether it is more probable the laws of nature, hitherto so immutably harmonious, should have undergone violation, or that a man should have told a lie?
And it was not enough that each particle of the past should be given the stability of metal or of marble: the whole collection, in its arrangement, no less than its entity, should be immutably fixed.
It would be immutably glorious as his mother's love had been interminably grievous.
If a man, through any intellectual or moral aberration, should reject Christianity, that is Catholicism, the belief of God and of his perfections stands immutably upon the foundations of nature.
With solemn purpose to observe Immutablyhis sovereign will.
The same ideas having immutably the same habitudes one to another.
Or must we think them as eternally, necessarily and immutably possible?
It is, for example, just as necessarily and immutably true of any actually existing man that he cannot be at the same time existing and not existing as it is that a man cannot be an irrational animal.
But in morals a hankering for certainty, born of timidity and nourished by love of authoritative prestige, has led to the idea that absence of immutably fixed and universally applicable ready-made principles is equivalent to moral chaos.
The utilitarian theory of equation of acts with consequences is as much a fiction of self-conceit as is the assumption of a fixed transcendental world wherein moral ideals are eternally andimmutably real.
Conditions here have stood asimmutably changeless as the hills themselves for a hundred years.
And in what sense is a law of nature an "immutably true" proposition?
These will be immutably the same, though the whole system of its administration should be changed; and he will be still bound to defend the lives and properties of his subjects, and to make them happy.
They may give it a sanction perhaps: it will still be immutably the same, and, though dressed in the outward habiliments of honour, will still be intrinsically base.
But we have no minute information respecting those years of 10 Johnson's life during which his character and his manners became immutably fixed.
To the sage, as Boswell loves to call him, it never 5 occurred to doubt that there must be something eternally and immutably good in the usages to which he had been accustomed.
And so, when Schleswig-Holstein was forgotten, and even the image of the Prince had begun to grow dim in the fickle memories of men, the solitary watcher remained immutably concentrated at her peculiar task.
The parts tend towards a dissolution, but the whole remains immutably the same.
Virtue was immutably excellent in itself, a permanent reality for man's realization, and subordinated everything else.
The same ideas having immutably the same habitudes one to another.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immutably" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: firmly; grimly; rigidly; rigorously