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There were old-line Whigs who preferred some sort of compromise, and in the upper South, there were those who thought the Union was indivisible.—Encyclopedia Britannica,
26 May 2026 Referencing Gandhi's observation that life is one indivisible whole, Esposito argues that a broken home life bleeds into workplace performance, while a struggling community erodes the stability of every family within it.—
William Jones,
USA Today,
28 Apr. 2026 Shaped by biblical ethics, nonviolence, and the belief that justice is indivisible, his framework refused the logic of zero-sum morality.—
Ed Gaskin,
Boston Herald,
15 Feb. 2026 Modern study of self-immolation in the West begins, so to say, with the Vietnam War; indivisible from the American response to Duc’s fatal protest was the feeling that the fire could catch Americans like a contagion.—
Doreen St. Félix,
New Yorker,
18 Jan. 2026 See All Example Sentences for indivisible
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Late Latin indivisibilis, from Latin in- + Late Latin divisibilis divisible