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indubitable

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[ UK /ɪndjˈuːbɪtəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. too obvious to be doubted

How To Use indubitable In A Sentence

  • Neither Joyce's finally intended "indubitable" nor his earliest "incurable" are mentioned in the synopsis. The Scandal of 'Ulysses'
  • This faith in the indubitable certainty of mathematical proofs was sadly shaken around 1900 by the discovery of the antinomies or paradoxes of set theory.
  • The story has many variants, but all of them reflect an indubitable truth - China-made toys are taking a great market share in global markets.
  • If this is so, no judgement, however modest, is absolutely indubitable.
  • And all that had vanished into the Nothingness was in the minds of the two dogs as they sang, and they sang back through the Nothingness to the land of Otherwhere, and ran once again with the Lost Pack, and yet were not entirely unaware of the present and of the indubitable two-legged god who was called Villa and who sang with them and loved them. CHAPTER XXXVI
  • The synopsis and footnotes have no record of the typed "indubitable" which catalyzed the revision. The Scandal of 'Ulysses'
  • This faith in the indubitable certainty of mathematical proofs was sadly shaken around 1900 by the discovery of the antinomies or paradoxes of set theory.
  • That, in turn, is accomplished through what he identifies as dogmatic doubt, not the Cartesian doubt that deems everything false so as to find a first indubitable principle, a useless enterprise, according to Thomasius. 18th Century German Philosophy Prior to Kant
  • The indubitable evidence we produced bore down our opponents in the debate.
  • Also, the indubitable suffering of the many people who might be helped by stem cell therapy ought to weigh heavily in the complex moral equation.
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