Of or pertaining to a noun belonging to a special class in which the possessive construction differs from the norm, especially for particular familial relationships and body parts
emphasis If you say that someone has an inalienable right to something, you are emphasizing that they have a right to it which cannot be changed or taken away. He said the republic now had an inalienable right to self-determination. an inalienable right, power etc cannot be taken from you (alienable (17-21 centuries), from aliéner , from alienus; ALIEN)
In some languages such as Navajo, and Ojibwe, many nouns, in particular familial relationships and body parts, fall into an inalienable noun class and always require a possessive affix such as my or his