inalienably การใช้
- The twelfth possessive form is almost always found on inalienably possessed nouns.
- The strategic desire to harness German economic power inalienably to French political ambitions remains.
- Ongan languages have inalienable possession, and inalienably possessed nouns are all vowel initial.
- Some stems, called inalienably possessed noun stems, cannot be used without a pronominal prefix.
- To refer to an inalienably possessed noun without specifying its owner, the indefinite possessive prefix is used.
- Greece considers the name Macedonia, which also refers to the region in northern Greece, to be inalienably Greek.
- However, the reader associated the final glottal stop inalienably with the vowel quality when reading short Thai vowel symbols.
- In general, nouns with the property of requiring obligatorily possession are notionally inalienably possessed, but the fit is rarely, if ever perfect.
- On 24 February 1752 he introduced a bill for annexing the forfeited estates in Scotland to the crown inalienably, which after some opposition became law.
- To describe alienable possession of an inalienably possessed noun, the regular possessive forms are used with the indefinite form as a base rather than the bare stem.
- The MFA fought the move, saying the will stipulates that the trustees maintain ownership of the paintings " permanently and inalienably, " and may not sell them.
- The money received by the duke and duchess was directed to be laid out and invested in the purchase of lands of inheritance in Scotland, to be inalienably entailed on a certain series of heirs.
- As Hillel Schwartz writes in " The Culture of the Copy " ( Zone Books, 1996 ), " we look toward ( twins ) for the measure of what is inalienably human ."
- The feudal customary land tillers, once threatened by poverty and starvation, but inalienably possessing the land unless not convicted for felony, had been converted into land proprietors threatened by eventual bankruptcy entailing the foreclosure of their property rights.
- But his will made clear that, even if the paintings hung in Boston, " ownership and control of the pictures shall be vested permanently and inalienably in . . . ( White Fund Trustees ) and their successors ."
- When something is inalienably possessed, it is usually an attribute : for example, John's big nose is inalienably possessed, because it cannot ( without surgery ) be removed from John; it is simply a quality he has.
- When something is inalienably possessed, it is usually an attribute : for example, John's big nose is inalienably possessed, because it cannot ( without surgery ) be removed from John; it is simply a quality he has.