inviolability
51Church Property — Property Ecclesiastical † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Property Ecclesiastical Abstract Right of Ownership That the Church has the right to acquire and possess temporal goods is a proposition which may now probably be considered an… …
52Glossary of ancient Roman religion — This is an incomplete list, which may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries. Ancient Roman religion …
53safety — I noun asylum, cover, custody, immunity, inviolability, preservation, protection, refuge, safeguard, safekeeping, safeness, sanctuary, security, shelter associated concepts: safety devices II index asylum (protection), inviolability …
54sanctity — I (Roget s IV) n. Syn. sanctification, sacredness, piety; see holiness 2 , virtue 1 . II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) n. holiness, sacredness, saintliness, godliness, inviolability, spirituality, righteousness, piety, purity. ANT.: wickedness,… …
55inviolable — in|vi|o|la|ble [ınˈvaıələbəl] adj formal [Date: 1400 1500; : French; Origin: Latin inviolabilis, from violare to violate ] an inviolable right, law, principle etc is extremely important and should be treated with respect and not broken or removed …
56inviolable — [[t]ɪnva͟ɪ͟ələb(ə)l[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED If a law or principle is inviolable, you must not break it. [FORMAL] The game had a single inviolable rule: obstacles were to be overcome, not circumvented. 2) ADJ If a country says its borders are… …
57ἀσυλία — ἀσυλίᾱ , ἀσυλία inviolability fem nom/voc/acc dual ἀσυλίᾱ , ἀσυλία inviolability fem nom/voc sg (attic doric aeolic) …
58ἀσυλίας — ἀσυλίᾱς , ἀσυλία inviolability fem acc pl ἀσυλίᾱς , ἀσυλία inviolability fem gen sg (attic doric aeolic) …
59ἀσυλίᾳ — ἀσυλίαι , ἀσυλία inviolability fem nom/voc pl ἀσυλίᾱͅ , ἀσυλία inviolability fem dat sg (attic doric aeolic) …
60Sanctified — Sanctify Sanc ti*fy, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Sanctified}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Sanctifying}.] [F. sanctifier, L. sanctificare; sanctus holy + ficare (in comp.) to make. See {Saint}, and { fy}.] 1. To make sacred or holy; to set apart to a holy or… …