We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
The thousand francs, the one incontestable item in the account, comes first.
2
Charlotte thought he looked very grand; and it is incontestable that Mr.
3
He acknowledges as incontestable the superiority of the poets of classical antiquity:-
4
Thus, in religion, the evidence of interested parties becomes irrefragable and incontestable.
5
That no man was superior to him in that art is incontestable.
Usage of incontestible in English
1
By some skillful detective work, I secured incontestible evidence of his guilt.
2
One piece of evidence alone would be incontestible: the book published under Louis XIV.
3
All England would leap to arms to defend their incontestible superiority to their mothers and their duties.
4
It is this which most strikingly attests the advance of society, which makes their advance a most incontestible fact.
5
Is it not natural, to give the most incontestible proofs of that tenderness with which our minds are impressed?
6
That was always incontestible.
7
How incontestible its decrees!
8
As for his farming, it was incontestible that the Harvest Group was unfalteringly producing, and he might be allowed his hobbies.
9
His Theory of Value, his Economic Interpretation of History, seemed to them the incontestible premises which necessarily led to his political conclusions.
10
Sometimes liberty was conferred through the agency of saws and ropes, at other times through that of a habeas corpus and an incontestible alibi.
11
"Was it incontestible without the suicide clause?"
12
"It is impossible, my dear," says she, "to describe their fondness for their uncle, which is to me an incontestible sign of a parent's goodness."
13
By some skillful detective work, I secured incontestible evidence of his guilt.
14
One piece of evidence alone would be incontestible: the book published under Louis XIV.
15
All England would leap to arms to defend their incontestible superiority to their mothers and their duties.
16
It is this which most strikingly attests the advance of society, which makes their advance a most incontestible fact.