[
UK
/ɪnvˈeəɹɪəbli/
]
[ US /ˌɪnˈvɛɹiəbɫi/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈvɛɹiəbɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
without variation or change, in every case
he always arrives on time
constantly kind and gracious
How To Use invariably In A Sentence
- They kept to the brush and trees, and invariably the man halted and peered out before crossing a dry glade or naked stretch of upland pasturage. War
- For the wider body of students, certainly I have noticed that an OE of some kind almost invariably follows within a couple of years of graduation.
- Make a note of the questions you want to ask. You will invariably forget some of them otherwise.
- Invariably the reply came back, 'Not now!'
- And why do strikers invariably miss a "hatful" of chances? Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
- The run is a 825-metre stampede from the corral where the bulls are kept to the outdoor bullfighting arena where they will be invariably killed by matadors later in the day.
- Which is why, no doubt, the most readable biographies have invariably been works of great scholarship as well.
- Identify all the dumbos out there - in politics, in government, wherever they may find themselves - and invariably they are not readers.
- Even in the United States, where the private media are almost invariably subservient to corporate interests, journalists generally do not cite polls by pollsters who have publicly partisan connections.
- At its core, “macroeconomic management” is invariably an exercise in surreptitious theft and fraud. Matthew Yglesias » Justice and Stabilization