Human beings have an inalienable right to know what they put in their bodies.
In the new charter they are offered as inalienable rights.
"What any of us does in our own lives is a private matter - a precious and inalienable right," she wrote.
But freedom in 1855 is not so inalienable a right.
I didn't mean to step on any of your inalienable rights.
In Iraq, it seemed, everybody has the inalienable right to get hurt without explaining why.
Are you one of those many Americans who regard driving your car as an inalienable right?
The inalienable right to judge a book by its cover.
Indeed, no less than privacy, physical safety is also an inalienable right.
Is it not an unalienable right, which lies at the bottom of every free government?
Liberty may well be an unalienable right, but it is hardly ever a sure thing.
The greatest evil, he believed, did not lie in unalienable rights.
"That they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights."
"No human has an unalienable right to see an elephant in captivity," she said.
By questioning this unalienable right, you are obviously asserting yourself as an enemy of the people.
People march in Washington protesting various assaults against the first two unalienable rights, life and liberty.
For us there are simply, here and elsewhere, people, citizens, with unalienable rights on which we wish to base our coexistence.
The scenario is meant to push back against the concept that human beings possess an unalienable right not to be killed.
People are created equal, they postulated, and they have certain unalienable rights.