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inevitable    音标拼音: [ɪn'ɛvətəbəl]
a. 不可避免的,无法回避的;照例必有的

不可避免的,无法回避的;照例必有的

inevitable
adj 1: incapable of being avoided or prevented; "the inevitable
result" [ant: {avertable}, {avertible}, {avoidable},
{evitable}]
2: invariably occurring or appearing; "the inevitable changes of
the seasons"
n 1: an unavoidable event; "don't argue with the inevitable"

Inevitable \In*ev"i*ta*ble\, a. [L. inevitabilis: cf. F.
in['e]vitable. See {In-} not, and {Evitable}.]
[1913 Webster]
1. Not evitable; incapable of being shunned; unavoidable;
certain. "The inevitable hour." --Gray.
[1913 Webster]

It was inevitable; it was necessary; it was planted
in the nature of things. --Burke.
[1913 Webster]

2. Irresistible. "Inevitable charms." --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]

67 Moby Thesaurus words for "inevitable":
absolute, apodictic, appointed, binding, bound, certain, clear,
clear and distinct, clear as day, compulsory, conclusive, decided,
decisive, definite, destined, determinate, devoted, dictated,
doomed, fatal, fated, fateful, foredoomed, foreordained,
imperative, in store, in the cards, indefeasible, ineluctable,
ineludible, inescapable, inevasible, inexorable, inflexible,
involuntary, irresistible, irrevocable, mandatory, marked,
necessary, obligatory, ordained, perfectly sure, positive,
predestined, predetermined, relentless, required, resistless,
settled, sure, sure as death, sure as fate, sure-enough, true,
unambiguous, unavoidable, uncontrollable, undeflectable,
unequivocal, unevadable, univocal, unmistakable, unpreventable,
unstoppable, unyielding, written


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  • What is the difference between inevitable and ineluctable
    Both inevitable and ineluctable are words in the dictionary that mean something is impossible to avoid So do we use them in a same or different context?
  • Consolidating memory is not instantaneous or even {momentary . . .
    A salutary B deliberate C sequential D momentary E inevitable This is a GRE exam question I know the meaning of the "momentary" and "inevitable" as I looked them up in the dictionary but as I read the whole paragraph again and again with "momentary" and "inevitable", both sound correct
  • Is there an idiom that means it was something inevitable?
    Is there an idiom that means "it was something inevitable"? I am not sure if it's the case, but there's this idiom, it was something like "this was ought to happen", but it was an actual idiom instead of just a phrase and I don't remember what it was exactly, I had it on the tip of the tongue, but I have it no more
  • Idiom for trying to avoid misfortune, but it happens anyway
    That's not the case in OP's question, as it's perfectly possible for the result to be inevitable regardless of trying to avoid it Palpatine's quote is also not ironic, as saving others did not cause his master's inability to save himself
  • Be about to do something - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I will go to work soon Can I say quot;I'm on the verge of going to work quot; or is it formal and I should use quot;be about to quot;?
  • A word that means blending into a community too much
    In this model, assimilation is, perhaps, inevitable, but still viewed as a somewhat negative result (Edit) Because the noun assimilation exists, the gerund assimilating has a slightly different nuance that refers more to the process than the result In your example sentence, I prefer to use "assimilation":
  • Why is iron pronounced EYE-URN but not EYE-RUN?
    I just noticed that the word iron is pronounced EYE-URN in standard Englishes instead of what the spelling suggests I have always been pronouncing it "EYE-RUN" but I just checked its
  • How can I say its actually the opposite in a single phrase?
    I don't want to express that "randomness is driven by evolution", that's why it's not "opposite" as in your definition but as "negation" Don't you think that the commonly held view on evolution as on a random process and the evolutionary theory where the process of evolution is an inevitable statistics of the population are incompatible?
  • What is the standard British pronunciation taught at schools?
    Over the years Received Pronunciation has fallen out of favour, this extract does a good job of summarising its inevitable demise [emphasis in bold mine] "It was standard practice until the 1950s for university students to adjust their regional accents to be closer to RP





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