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[ US /ˌɪˈnɛvətəbɫi/ ]
[ UK /ɪnˈɛvɪtəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in such a manner as could not be otherwise
    it is necessarily so
    we must needs by objective
  2. by necessity
    the situation slid inescapably toward disaster

How To Use inevitably In A Sentence

  • That inevitably means that you will owe more money than you already do.
  • Of course what is small will inevitably vary greatly according to the circumstances and to say that a curtilage is a small area is obviously not to provide any precise test of identification.
  • Editors must, then, exercise a choice and exercising a choice inevitably involves ignoring certain options.
  • Inevitably, though, with 14 fewer rooms to spread out in, the Pages had to part with several cherished possessions.
  • Anyone proposing such a project, which in effect aims to politicize young people, is inevitably warily received and closely scrutinized.
  • The investigation into the air crash would inevitably apportion blame to certain members of the crew.
  • That would secure an emphatic victory and, inevitably, set tongues wagging once more. Times, Sunday Times
  • To make your life a sound structrure that will serve others and fulfil your own potential, you have to remember that strength, however massive , can't endure unless it has the interlocking supprt of others. Go it alone and you'll inevitably tumble. 
  • Does that not inevitably end up in a form of fideism?
  • The result will inevitably fuel speculation about the Prime Minister's future.
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