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indiscerptible
[ in-di-surp-tuh-buhl ]
Word History and Origins
Origin of indiscerptible1
Example Sentences
It is literally sanity of soul, integrity and purity of spirit; it is what has been sometimes called the beautiful soul—the indiscerptible unity of reason and impulse.
As is the effect, such is the cause: as thought, such is the power that thinks; a power impassive and indiscerptible.”
Earnest am I and assiduous; Yet I'm certain that I shan't amount To a lot till I use "viduous," "Indiscerptible," and "tantamount."
Bishop Butler's grand argument for belief in the possibility of a future life goes upon the supposition that our conscious personality is distinct and separable from our perishable frame, and is in itself "indiscerptible," so that there is no reason why it should not survive the death of the body.
The belief that man has an immortal soul inserted into a mortal body from which, being, as Bishop Butler phrases it, "indiscerptible," it is parted at death, has become untenable.
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