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inarguable

ADJECTIVE
  1. against which no argument can be made

How To Use inarguable In A Sentence

  • She demonstrates that a feminist interpretation of Marxism, even one based on seemingly inarguable economic or material facts, is susceptible to the prejudices of race and class.
  • Much like yoga or the odd bout of meditation, their benefits are inarguable. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is inarguable that the amendment to Article 9 has conferred citizenship rights that are more liberal than any other EU country.
  • The speed with which this was carried out demonstrates an inarguable historical fact: the Democratic Party is an instrument of big business.
  • It's inarguable that there's a network effect in which low cost of production/high page volume can make text ads amazingly lucrative - and make the Blogspots of the world wonderfully high-margin ventures.
  • Let me preface this by emphasizing that I do not believe that any one poll is an inarguable, accurate reflection of the electorate… and that even if one is, a lot can change between now and Election Day.
  • Sympathetic though it is, his conclusion only sounds inarguable.
  • This kind of velocity is inarguable. Times, Sunday Times
  • In that sense, the emailer is probably right — it isn’t 100%, wholly, totally inarguable (although I do disagree). The Volokh Conspiracy » 1. Science, Faith, and Not Ruling Out Possibilities
  • We can have the age-old debate over whether or not song lyrics are poetry - Kelly's words and form are simpler than Plath's, for instance - but I think the value of Paul Kelly to Australian literary culture is inarguable.
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