[
US
/ˌɪnɪˈskeɪpəbəɫ/
]
[ UK /ˈɪnɪskˌeɪpəbəl/ ]
[ UK /ˈɪnɪskˌeɪpəbəl/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
impossible to avoid or evade
inescapable conclusion
an ineluctable destiny
an unavoidable accident
How To Use inescapable In A Sentence
- The economic logic of reform is inescapable.
- She didn't want to confront the inescapable fact that she would have to sell the house.
- There are certain inescapable realities that teach us humility, that force us to acknowledge we're not really masters of the universe. Tomatoes Under the Hammer
- In concluding their report, the consultants stated the inescapable reality was that, for the foreseeable future, car travel will continue to grow in both absolute and proportionable terms.
- But the scale and sharpness of the wealth gap presents an inescapable danger.
- The way she writes you might think that tantra is a solid, inescapable fact of true polyamorous living, and that every polyamorist is a spiritual yogi seeking enlightenment through the energies released and shared during intercourse, provided of course that one has taken the time to properly align one’s chakras. Poly people « Love | Peace | Ohana
- And yet there is some essence of Mininess in the DS3, some inescapable core quality that goes beyond the mundane fact that it is a small three-door car. On the road: Citroën DS3 1.6 THP DSport
- Â Submerged in subtext, The White Ribbon is a fantastic film that offers no easy answers and a future both inescapable and inexplicable. THE WHITE RIBBON Review – Collider.com
- This leads to the inescapable conclusion that the two things are connected.
- A domestic reckoning of sorts, the latest book by Apter, a psychologist, is an in-depth look at “the inescapable power of in-laws.” Cover to Cover