Sacrosanct vs Immutable - What's the difference?
sacrosanct | immutable |
beyond alteration, criticism, or interference, especially due to religious sanction; inviolable.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=August 14
, author=Kenneth R. Harney
, title=Homeowner mortgage write-off may be in jeopardy
, work=Los Angeles Times
sacred.
("sacrosanct on Wikiquote")
Unable to be changed without exception.
(programming, of a variable) Not able to be altered in the memory after its value is set initially, such as a constant.
As adjectives the difference between sacrosanct and immutable
is that sacrosanct is beyond alteration, criticism, or interference, especially due to religious sanction; inviolable while immutable is unable to be changed without exception.As a noun immutable is
something that cannot be changed.sacrosanct
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation, page= , passage=After decades of being considered politically sacrosanct , why are homeowner mortgage write-offs suddenly on the chopping block?}}
References
* * Oxford English Dictionary , 2nd edition, 1989immutable
English
Adjective
(-)- The government has enacted an immutable law.
