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incontrovertibly

[ UK /ɪnkˌɒntɹəvˈɜːtəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an obvious and provable manner
    his documentary sources are demonstrably wrong

How To Use incontrovertibly In A Sentence

  • No solution is incontrovertibly right.
  • It is incontrovertibly a blooming great tune and it lies buried in the bubble wrapping of a botched piano concerto.
  • Regardless of one's point of view, though, Dashan has incontrovertibly become a de facto goodwill ambassador to China. And Canada has given him his reward.
  • Her book shows incontrovertibly that he was innocent.
  • Obama's reluctance to lead, and to establish the United States ringingly and incontrovertibly as the ally of the freedom movements, is owed to many things, but most of all, I think, it is the result of certain conventional assumptions about the historical agency of the United States in the developing world. Notable & Quotable
  • Here, then, plainly and incontrovertibly, if we acceded to the request for coöperation with the Commission as now constituted, was our whole system of doctrinal teaching to be made the subject of visitatorial examination by Protestant Commissioners, some of whom were laymen, some clergymen; and from their impressions would be derived their report.
  • Even back then, it seemed incontrovertibly absurd to think that someone would be so credulous about televised messages.
  • It is painful to admit, but it is incontrovertibly true, that a large number of those now occupied in nursing are totally unfitted for the duties they are called upon to perform.
  • Huntington is incontrovertibly right that historically the origin of modern democracy is, as he says, rooted in Western Christianity.
  • It is asserted in this appeal that the jury's verdict was perverse and that the answers were incontrovertibly unreasonable.
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