0 not able to be punished, criticized, or changed in any way:
2 a member of the lowest social group in Indian society
3 not able to be punished, criticized, or changed in any way:
They are now static, untouchable museum objects, but they were designed to be opened and discovered.
The musicologist had one flaw, however: a tendency to 'treat his conclusions as personal and untouchable acquisitions'.
In particular, this technology addresses the relationship between touchable/ untouchable and intimacy/intimidation.
Thinkers in both countries have disagreed, sometimes passionately, over whether being black is like being colonized or like being untouchable.
Early in 1930, untouchable uplift had been freely incorporated into the wider programme of civil disobedience.
Combinations of print and parody were thus untouchable, even though in skilled hands they could form an especially devastating sort of critique.
One of its aims was to deny that untouchable uplift, as a truly secular and rational project, could possibly have communal implications.
Untouchable separatism could be characterized as a battle against religious unification.