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inescapably

[ US /ˌɪnɪˈskeɪpəbɫi/ ]
[ UK /ˈɪnɪskˌe‍ɪpəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. by necessity
    the situation slid inescapably toward disaster

How To Use inescapably In A Sentence

  • Dara, a counselor, is convinced that everyone is inescapably marked by childhood; she throws herself into romantic relationships with frightening intensity. The House on Fortune Street: Summary and book reviews of The House on Fortune Street by Margot Livesey.
  • Nutrition guidance is, inescapably, culture-bound: where there is starvation, more calories are good; where there is hyperendemic obesity, more calories are bad. David Katz, M.D.: New Dietary Guidelines: A Physician's Perspective
  • I agree with both Ronald Trowbridge and E.B. White, but would argue there is a substantial difference between the “lean” of a journalist whose work is inescapably colored by his experience and values no matter how hard he labors to be fair, and the “lean” of someone engaged in political advocacy, which is more of a leap. Letters to the Editor
  • The work of managing a natural environment is inescapably a work of local knowledge.
  • Milk is inescapably associated with new life, emerging from the body of a mother animal for the purpose of nourishing her own newborn young.
  • the situation slid inescapably toward disaster
  • Paul Pope really pulled out all the stops here and it's nice sometimes to leave a mystery hanging, especially in a comic like this as, inescapably, intertextual as it is. Batman: Year 100
  • As a result, modernism seems to germinate - naturally and inescapably - in the damp, sweetly rotten soil of academic art.
  • While Brown did not prescribe busing for racial balance, the logic of its argument led inescapably to that conclusion, even if no one thought of it in 1954.
  • When they hand out grades, and give or with-hold promotion, teachers are inescapably confronted with this dilemma.
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