inevitability

[ UK /ɪnˌɛvɪtəbˈɪlɪti/ ]
[ US /ˌɪˌnɛvɪtəˈbɪɫɪti/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality of being unavoidable
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How To Use inevitability In A Sentence

  • A misfield by Arnold at extra cover gifted Mongia two more as events took on a certain air of inevitability.
  • Which had followed with depressing inevitability, as he'd gathered from her Christmas cards and occasional e-mails. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • Yet he recaptured the Challenge Cup he won two years ago in such comfort the whole match had a certain air of inevitability. The Sun
  • Tocqueville wrote in the 1830s of the inevitability of democracy, but warned against ‘the dangers of a tyranny of the majority’.
  • This bit of nonnews has to strike some in the Democratic Party the same way I looked upon the inevitability of the Bob Dole For President freight train in 1996. From On High
  • Nor is it merely the fact that they are swimming against the tide of Modernism with its utopian sense of inevitability and its flagship aesthetic of reductive minimalism.
  • Audiences must have bought into the fatalistic inevitability of the plot devices.
  • In their middle years, the members of the Baby Boom generation will face the inevitability of their mortality.
  • The majority appears unmoved by that inevitability. Christianity Today
  • Inevitability per se seems coiled upon itself in this alphabetic reknotting of Phonemanography: Romantic to Victorian
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