What's the difference between indissoluble and indissolubly?
Indissoluble
Definition:
(a.) Not dissoluble; not capable of being dissolved, melted, or liquefied; insoluble; as few substances are indissoluble by heat, but many are indissoluble in water.
(a.) Incapable of being rightfully broken or dissolved; perpetually binding or obligatory; firm; stable, as, an indissoluble league or covenant.
Example Sentences:
(1) Unlike other Old Testament marriages, these are held to be indissoluble.
(2) It is an indissoluble part of British culture and democracy, a fact that the House of Lords well understood when it introduced its public interest amendment in 2003.
(3) In short, language is in its essence ethical, and the ethical experience is indissolubly bound to the verb.
(4) Played here by Anthony Hopkins , in facial prosthesis and fake belly, and the neither tiny nor particularly birdlike Helen Mirren, Hitch and Alma appear as an indissoluble partnership in art and life, suddenly threatened by pressures from without (no budget) but more from within, particularly by Alfred's tendency, now tiresome to the red-haired Alma, to become obsessed with his leading blondes.
(5) In its indissoluble relation to the repetition compulsion and Nirvana principle, Thanatos is the bedrock of much of Freud's later philosophy.
(6) The development of blood capillaries of the human intraorganic nerves is a complex process, indissolubly connected with development of myelin and amyelin conductors.
(7) By creating a colourful link with the iconography of the nation, Mas hopes to make an indissoluble connection between himself and the essence of being Catalan.
(8) Since 2008, and the massive Sichuan earthquake that radicalized his artistic practice, his art and activism have become indissolubly joined into a single enterprise, ambitious, open-hearted, and indispensable in an art world more than happy to look the other way at abuses in China and everywhere else.
(9) As the US republic evolved, the lesson of Douglass’s insight – that there is an indissoluble link between liberty and the freedom to read what one chooses – was baked into its civic culture.
(10) Labour lost trust on both leadership and economics, the two indissolubly intertwined.
(11) In 1948 he had three stories accepted by the New Yorker and never submitted his work to the "slicks" again after that, his name becoming indissolubly linked with that of the New Yorker.
(12) Three of these developed indissoluble intravesical blood clots which persisted until they were evacuated surgically 5 to 17 days after cessation of AMCA therapy.
(13) While clinging to doctrine that considers gay sex wrong and marriage indissoluble, bishops in Rome for the pope’s extraordinary synod on the family endorsed a midway report which said the church should accompany its teachings “with mercy” and focus on the “positive aspects” of different life models.
(14) The principle of indissoluble unity and interconnection of changes in structure and function is emphasized, while the thesis of the primacy of function in the shaping of the form and the concept of functional diseases are rejected.
(15) Is that uniqueness indissolubly linked to operation by religious orders?
Indissolubly
Definition:
(adv.) In an indissoluble manner.
Example Sentences:
(1) Unlike other Old Testament marriages, these are held to be indissoluble.
(2) It is an indissoluble part of British culture and democracy, a fact that the House of Lords well understood when it introduced its public interest amendment in 2003.
(3) In short, language is in its essence ethical, and the ethical experience is indissolubly bound to the verb.
(4) Played here by Anthony Hopkins , in facial prosthesis and fake belly, and the neither tiny nor particularly birdlike Helen Mirren, Hitch and Alma appear as an indissoluble partnership in art and life, suddenly threatened by pressures from without (no budget) but more from within, particularly by Alfred's tendency, now tiresome to the red-haired Alma, to become obsessed with his leading blondes.
(5) In its indissoluble relation to the repetition compulsion and Nirvana principle, Thanatos is the bedrock of much of Freud's later philosophy.
(6) The development of blood capillaries of the human intraorganic nerves is a complex process, indissolubly connected with development of myelin and amyelin conductors.
(7) By creating a colourful link with the iconography of the nation, Mas hopes to make an indissoluble connection between himself and the essence of being Catalan.
(8) Since 2008, and the massive Sichuan earthquake that radicalized his artistic practice, his art and activism have become indissolubly joined into a single enterprise, ambitious, open-hearted, and indispensable in an art world more than happy to look the other way at abuses in China and everywhere else.
(9) As the US republic evolved, the lesson of Douglass’s insight – that there is an indissoluble link between liberty and the freedom to read what one chooses – was baked into its civic culture.
(10) Labour lost trust on both leadership and economics, the two indissolubly intertwined.
(11) In 1948 he had three stories accepted by the New Yorker and never submitted his work to the "slicks" again after that, his name becoming indissolubly linked with that of the New Yorker.
(12) Three of these developed indissoluble intravesical blood clots which persisted until they were evacuated surgically 5 to 17 days after cessation of AMCA therapy.
(13) While clinging to doctrine that considers gay sex wrong and marriage indissoluble, bishops in Rome for the pope’s extraordinary synod on the family endorsed a midway report which said the church should accompany its teachings “with mercy” and focus on the “positive aspects” of different life models.
(14) The principle of indissoluble unity and interconnection of changes in structure and function is emphasized, while the thesis of the primacy of function in the shaping of the form and the concept of functional diseases are rejected.
(15) Is that uniqueness indissolubly linked to operation by religious orders?