Unconditional or Unable to remove. Obligatory.
I was under the impression that my rights were unalienable.
The word used, as an example, in the Declaration of Independence is: Unalienable.
Easy to look up. The Constitution doesn't use either. The U.S. Declaration of Independence states "We find these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal and are endowed by their creator with certain UNALIENABLE rights...." (not inalienable)
untransferable, non-transferable, God-given, "natural rights," unassignable, absolute, inalienable. The final version of the Declaration of Independence used the word "unalienable," but some of the earlier drafts used "inalienable."
Everybody has unalienable rights; they can't be taken away.
Inalienable.
unalienable
The word is independence.
The base word in independence is "dependent." The prefix "in-" in "independence" means "not," so independence refers to not being dependent on others or free from the control or influence of others.
The word is independence. It means freedom from the control of others.
According to one online dictionary, it is "huria," which means "freedom, liberty, independence."
depend. "in" is a prefix and "ence" is a suffix.