indivisible
/ˌɪndɪˈvɪzəbl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌɪndɪˈvɪzəbl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌin-də-ˈvi-zə-bəl/ (ame, mw)
indivisible — 形容詞
- indivisiblepositive
- more indivisiblecomparative
- most indivisiblesuperlative
1. If a thing or group is indivisible, it forms one complete whole whose parts cann
不可分割的
無法分開或獨立處理的
If a thing or group is indivisible, it forms one complete whole whose parts cannot be separated or treated on their own without losing their identity.
The Canadian constitution describes the country as a united and indivisible whole.
加拿大憲法將該國描述為一個統一且不可分割的整體。
collocation: indivisible whole / indivisible nation
Samir regards his software team of twelve engineers as an indivisible unit where every member is equally important.
Samir 將他十二人的軟體工程團隊視為一個不可分割的單位,每位成員都同等重要。
indivisible + noun (unit / whole / part)
For voters in last year's referendum, healthcare and education formed an indivisible pair that politicians could not split apart.
對去年公投的選民來說,醫療保健與教育形成了一對不可分割的政策組合,政治人物無法將其拆開。
The 1998 Good Friday Agreement treated economic cooperation and demilitarisation as indivisible goals.
1998 年的《耶穌受難日協議》將經濟合作與非軍事化視為不可分割的目標。
At the town hall meeting, Elena argued that press freedom and social equality are indivisible — you cannot promote one without the other.
在市政廳會議上,Elena 主張新聞自由與社會平等是不可分割的——你無法只提倡其中一項而忽略另一項。
- inseparable
Very similar for abstract ideas, but 'inseparable' is more common for personal connections; 'indivisible' leans toward legal/political contexts.
- unified
Focuses on the act of bringing together; 'indivisible' stresses the impossibility of splitting.
- integral
Emphasises that a part is essential to the whole; 'indivisible' emphasises the whole cannot be broken.
文法句型
be + indivisible
indivisible + noun
用法筆記
Commonly used before nouns such as 'whole,' 'nation,' 'unit,' 'part,' 'rights,' or 'goals.' Frequent in formal, legal, and political writing.