indivisive
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]indivisive (comparative more indivisive, superlative most indivisive)
- Indivisible.
- 1850, John Evelyn, Richard Macdonnell Evanson, The history of religion, ed. with notes by R.M. Evanson, page 162:
- […] especially since it is conceived it may be evinced without any pre-existence in the platonic notion, or the least violence to other truths, and solve its immortal and indivisive nature; nor stands in need of new fabrics and creations to attend every human conception.
- 1992, Kernial Singh Sandhu, The ASEAN reader, page 90:
- The pattern of bilateral conflict that emerges in Southeast Asia is determined by considerations of indivisive sovereignty, primarily focusing on territorial rights and economic interests without any particular time constraints.
- 2003, Cyril Hart, Learning and Culture in Late Anglo-Saxon England and the Influence of Ramsey Abbey on the Major English Monastic Schools:
- No act of theirs disjointed, no subservient bud doth flower For equal in the Godhead reigns the indivisive power.