Lexicographical Neighbors of Infrangibly
Literary usage of Infrangibly
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Expositor edited by Samuel Cox, William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt (1908)
"God must either punish sin or expiate it, for the sake of His infrangibly holy
nature. Do let us take the holiness of God centrally and seriously, ..."
2. Good Words by Norman Macleod (1889)
"In Him, however they may- repudiate each other, they are essentially, infrangibly
one. While therefore we imperatively assert the limits of spiritual life, ..."
3. Empire in Asia, how We Came by it: A Book of Confessions by William Torrens McCullagh Torrens (1872)
"... had been prepared for them much earlier than was actually avowed, when, after
being repudiated in 1792, it was, in 1802, infrangibly imposed upon them. ..."
4. History of the Rebellion in Ireland, in the Year 1798, &c: Containing an by James Gordon, Richard Musgrave (1803)
"... an infrangibly determined adherence to their British connexion is necessary
for their safety. Some extraordinary circumstances, we must allow, ..."
5. African Slavery in America by Charles Jared Ingersoll (1856)
"All the wide-spread United States, infrangibly welded together by the product of
slave labor, impart to their vast commerce an extent and freedom not ..."