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
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  • 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United States, where the private media are almost invariably subservient to corporate interests, journalists generally do not cite polls by pollsters who have publicly partisan connections.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
  • All this, it will be noticed, is a case of cell-multiplication, which differs from that which takes place in the unicellular organisms only in its being _invariably_ preceded (as far as we know) by karyokinesis, and in the resulting cells being all confined within a common envelope, and so in not being free to separate. Darwin, and After Darwin (Vol. 1 and 3, of 3) An Exposition of the Darwinian Theory and a Discussion of Post-Darwinian Questions
  • The sides of the kibitka are invariably made from chii, woven to protect the kibitka from dust and the fire from strong draughts, while letting in fresh air and some light.
  • Near her wandered her husband, orientally bland, invariably affable, and from time to time squinting sideways, as usual, in the ever-renewed expectation that he might catch a glimpse of his stiff, retroussé moustache. The Younger Set
  • The treatment of engineering dynamics is almost invariably linear, although examples of simple non-linear formulations are provided.
  • He replied by the term invariably used by the Spaniards when they see doubt or distrust exhibited. The Bible in Spain; or, the journeys, adventures, and imprisonments of an Englishman, in an attempt to circulate the Scriptures in the Peninsula
  • She advises which way we should jump, and almost invariably goes the American way, the argument generally boiling down to the fact that there are more Americans than Poms.
  • Professionals invariably dominate such bodies, making consensus a chimera.
  • Apologists wishing to exploit a revisionist history of science invariably stress the profoundly religious orientation of many prominent scientists.
  • We invariably travelled on some clapped-out smelly bus that made us nauseous with the diesel fumes.
  • The poise has a cigarette in its hand, which cigarette it has just pausingly rolled from material furnished by a number of carefully saved butts (whereof Afrique's pockets are invariably full). The Enormous Room
  • The thing about George Bush the elder is that if you paid enough attention to him and what he said, at a certain point you could safely assume that whatever statement issued from his mouth, invariably the opposite was the case. — The Political Revival of George Herbert Walker Bush - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • These are almost invariably twisty, wet, uneven, covered in spilt diesel, negatively cambered and crawling with fools.
  • They noted that the cephalopod eagerly attacked the molt and invariably did so by working from the posterior of the lobster abdomen toward the anterior.
  • The adjusting disks thereby invariably define a position of the kingbolt with respect to the supporting arms.
  • Back in the 1950s, Dutch ethologist Nikolaas Tinbergen conducted now-classic studies of the bird's incubation behavior and discovered something astonishing: When presented with a choice between brooding its own small egg and the giant egg of a much larger bird, the oystercatcher invariably chose to sit on the giant one. From 'The End of Overeating'
  • It goes without saying that shoppers who are ill-advised enough to carry them at all invariably have a purse or wallet bulging with them.
  • It invariably takes me by surprise when I enter a steamy greenhouse in winter and my glasses fog up. Times, Sunday Times
  • The classically trained singers that I've heard inevitably sound less than spontaneous, to be charitable, and their diction is invariably too "correct" and too lots of other things that I don't want to hear. Salvati dunque e scolpati
  • This is exacerbated by the actors' cloth-eared delivery - stresses invariably in the wrong places render potentially hilarious lines peculiar and baroque.
  • Those applicants will invariably find something. Times, Sunday Times
  • There were days when one was wearing heavy, gaudy clothing, which was invariably a pain to be endured considering the gathering one would be amongst.
  • This type of pun is of course frequent in heraldic rebuses, but these almost invariably stand for personal names, although they can sometimes be identical with place names; a few also relate to dedications.
  • Almost invariably, for some reason, the overweight person is a huge offender, even though dressed in the muumuu or bowling shirt and sweatpants, they still manage to make up for looking bad by trying to smell good and are therefore a huge nuisance. Roseanne Archy
  • Why is our war coverage invariably sanitized to “PG” or even “G,” when we can go to the movies anytime and see “R” rated, pornographically violent films? William Astore: A Very American Coup: Coming Soon to a Hometown Near You
  • Gavin was a rather attractive man who invariably dressed in jeans and a tight T-shirt.
  • Constantinople, where I lived gaily, and spent my money; but I found that to mix in the world, it is necessary not only to have an attaghan, but also to have the courage to use it; and in several broils which took place, from my too frequent use of the water of the Giaour, I invariably proved that, although my voice was that of a lion, my heart was but as water, and the finger of contempt was but too often pointed at the beard of pretence. The Pacha of Many Tales
  • Such a warrior is invariably a veteran, and a mistress of the art of war.
  • Instead, they all derive from natural living sources, invariably micro-organisms themselves.
  • In Europe armourers have invariably been workers in metal, but in other parts of the world materials such as wickerwork, bone, and coconut fibre have been used.
  • Tagore seemed to be a wonderful performer, who can invariably wake up the string of my deep heart and make my soul trembling by resonance.
  • Invariably, he would publicly upbraid those members of the clergy he deemed to be unconverted.
  • The problem with working in fashion is that you are invariably running a ticker tape of references in your head, invisible to most other people. Times, Sunday Times
  • Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and commonplace a crime is, the more difficult is it to bring it home. 
  • More than 60 per cent of the fuselage was completely redesigned, and one of the major problems was the way one change invariably led to another. Plane Speaking - a personal view of aviation history
  • From the way they are built, but oftener from the way they are kept, and from no intelligent inspection whatever being exercised over them, they are almost invariably dens of foul air, and the "servants 'health" suffers in an "unaccountable" (?) way, even in the country. Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not
  • As the flights lasted up to eighteen hours disembarking passengers were invariably cold and uncomfortable.
  • The Sac a commis is the growth of high dry situations, and invariably in a piney country or on it's borders. it is generally found in the open piney woodland as on the Western side of the Rocky mountain but in this neighbourhood we find it only in the praries or on their borders in the more open woodlands; Original journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-1806
  • It was invariably fresh from local allotments or no farther away than the next county. Times, Sunday Times
  • His indifference to cars was also reflected in the fact that as a young actor trying to make his way in London he was forced to make do with whatever was available - invariably the cast-offs of other actors.
  • Blue days invariably follow my periods of most intense activity. Christianity Today
  • Invariably, the other goats who want to get back to the grain bucket try to storm their way in. Archive 2010-08-01
  • Such ambivalent cultures invariably breed an extraordinary sense of personal dignidad (deeg-nee-DAHD) or "dignity," and an unbounded need for this dignity to be respected, regardless of the cost to the individual, family members, friends or strangers. I would like to know about "The Culture"
  • Sister Casualty off duty invariably wore a trouser suit, white shirt, and silk cravat in assorted colours.
  • There may be lassitude in the federal response to natural disaster, but that is not the same as culpability, and still less is it culpability for the failings the critics invariably cite.
  • Invariably, it's a let-down because most things are not very good.
  • In this context, artists invariably become passive pawns in someone else's game.
  • 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.
  • It is our tank sections and infantry squads that invariably make contact with hostile forces, not companies or battalions.
  • His criticisms, though occasionally biting, were never vicious, and invariably constructive.
  • This waste water invariably ends up in river systems.
  • Invariably the butt of the family joker, he leaves his wife clamouring for an image maker for a husband.
  • Invariably, the winter sparrows head north again to resume their breeding activities, and I am left to enjoy my resident species, such as the spotted towhee, California towhee, scrub jay, and California thrasher.
  • This type of pun is of course frequent in heraldic rebuses, but these almost invariably stand for personal names, although they can sometimes be identical with place names; a few also relate to dedications.
  • At most handicrafts exhibitions, exotically designed folding fans are invariably among the interesting articles on display in the stalls.
  • Both the Bible and history demonstrate that such a measure of blessing is almost invariably related to the means employed.
  • The Colonel was invariably festooned in the fruits of Bo-Bo's labours and - if unusual - her labours were most accomplished.
  • As indicated previously, intracellular calcium is usually an inhibitor of adenylate cyclase, but this is not invariably the case.
  • Reproduction occurs by division, by budding or by fragmentation, but the parts are invariably multinucleate. Marine Protozoa from Woods Hole Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission 21:415-468, 1901
  • 22 karat gold was invariably adulterated and actually only 20 or even 18 karat gold.
  • For any attempt to resolve the issue by pronouncing the work of critique to be wholly isomorphous with the contingent material experiences that gave rise to it or, alternatively, as sublating (aufheben) aesthetic experience into pure abstractions invariably forecloses on the ethical implications of critical practice. Pfau, Coda & Works Cited'
  • In my part of the country it is so much the usual method for the tiger to seize by the nape of the neck, that a native, when asked if he is sure that it was a tiger and not a panther, always puts his hand to the back of his neck, and if he says that the animal was seized by the throat, we invariably assume that the seizer is a panther. Gold, Sport, and Coffee Planting in Mysore
  • In trying to find solutions to refugee problems everywhere, UNHCR must invariably "mediate", so to speak, between the concerns of states, and the rights, wishes and aspirations of refugees. The Current Problems of Refugee Populations
  • Invariably a bureaucrat of the media company concerned fronts up and runs an abstract sort of case, but I insisted on turning up myself to argue my own case.
  • We invariably travelled on some clapped-out smelly bus that made us nauseous with the diesel fumes.
  • He was invariably willing to discuss the possibilities hypothetically.
  • In my experience of photographing people, shots one to four can invariably be junked, shot five often has some comedic value, but shot six is usually a zinger.
  • He is simply tolerant and forbearant, and refrains from judging harshly; and harsh judgments of others will almost invariably provoke harsh judgments of ourselves. Searchlights on Health The Science of Eugenics
  • Because most people living there still called the whole region ‘Old Bourbon,’ any whiskey shipped from Limestone was invariably advertised and identified on barrelheads as ‘Old Bourbon Whiskey,’ no matter where it was actually made.
  • Throughout the euphausiids, decapods, and stomatopods, larvae invariably possess compound eyes, which are naturally complicated structures.
  • The Barber invariably suffers from stale routine in repertoire performance. Times, Sunday Times
  • And laudanum invariably led to castor oil, and if that failed to work, to the gruesome lavement machine. The Mistress of Nothing
  • It is never quite free from the old atavistic type of the trifoliolate leaves, and invariably, when external conditions become less favorable, this atavistic form is apt to gain dominion over the more refined varietal character. Species and Varieties, Their Origin by Mutation
  • The answer, almost invariably, is people from Third World countries. The Economics and Philosophy of the Cruise Ship, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Moreover, while many adolescents wrestle with these feelings, the auxiliary parents' struggles would invariably involve their charge.
  • Only members of the Democratic Unionist party invariably refer to Derry as Londonderry.
  • Preceded by severe neuralgic pain, the eruption is vesicular on an erythematous base and is almost invariably unilateral, occupying the dermatome of a peripheral nerve. Chapter 9
  • The only difference being that they invariably refuse to bring me the requested cup of tea. Times, Sunday Times
  • Plane crashes make the headlines because they are spectacular and invariably involve major loss of life.
  • With the stadium full of song and din and the air crackling with emotion, the England team invariably find more of themselves. Times, Sunday Times
  • Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and commonplace a crime is, the more difficult is it to bring it home. 
  • The protoplasm is more or less extensively excavated by fluid spaces, vacuoles; one clearer circular space or vacuole, which is invariably present, appears at intervals, enlarges gradually, and then vanishes abruptly, to reappear after a brief interval; this is called the contractile vacuole (c.v.). Text Book of Biology, Part 1: Vertebrata
  • But it looked delectable in the pages of the magazines I leafed through, which invariably featured recipes and pointers for the "perfect" holiday table. The Customs Of the Country
  • In fact, being typically British, when I hear those unmistakeable sounds, I invariably find myself feeling incredibly embarrassed even about being in the privacy of my own flat.
  • His videos invariably feature a harem of voluptuous, bikini-clad lovelies positively gagging to get down with the self-styled Mr Lover Lover.
  • When the topic of dressing up comes, one would invariably think of the latest low-waist trousers and tops, bell-bottoms and a host of other designer wear.
  • When females encounter larvae more than 20 h before their own larvae hatch, they invariably kill these larvae, and some females cannibalize larvae hatching 9-12 h before their own.
  • A man who moralize is usually a hypocrite, and a women who moralize is invariably plain.
  • According to Walker, only male katydids and crickets strike up a tune, and when they do, they invariably have one thing on their mind: sex.
  • While these interviews are invariably good value, the celebrity contributions are less successful. Times, Sunday Times
  • A competent and self-confident person is incapable of jealousy in anything. Jealousy is invariably a symptom of neurotic insecurity. Robert A. Heinlein 
  • The only negative is the erratic quality of the food, although Sunday brunch is invariably excellent.
  • I have written before that any history of poetry is inevitably a history of change in poetry, and that an inevitable consequence is that the well-wrought urn is almost invariably a trivial accomplishment. Only Change and No Urns?
  • This erotics of identification invariably frustrates the viewers' anticipations and appeals instead to their puzzle-solving abilities.
  • Television dramas were usually adaptations of stage plays, and invariably about upper classes.
  • Frustratingly, these pensées are almost invariably generalized.
  • Every year it surpasses itself with kitschness and when you see it listed on the television schedule, eyes invariably roll to heaven accompanied by moans and groans of distaste.
  • His explanations have invariably emphasised the transitory nature of the problem. Times, Sunday Times
  • For years, I have said that the easiest way to break a cryptographic product is almost never by breaking the algorithm, that almost invariably there is a programming error that allows you to bypass the mathematics and break the product. Secure Passwords Keep You Safer
  • Anyone who imagines that any regulatory system can invariably guarantee success is naive.
  • And where they were situated, sheltered behind Sonoma Mountain, the fogs were almost invariably high fogs. CHAPTER XVIII
  • The clerk to the local authority was the principal legal adviser and, therefore, invariably a lawyer.
  • The recurrence, moreover, of pregnancy in the lactescent female may render the milk of a bad quality, and will invariably lessen its quantity. Remarks on the Subject of Lactation
  • [Socrates] forces Gorgias to admit that such sophisticated language, disconnected from the roots of truth, in fact pursues some ulterior motives, that it invariably turns into an instrument of power, something it has been, by its very nature, right from the start. .... Insight Scoop | The Ignatius Press Blog:
  • Then the punishment of individuals invariably took account of the harm or damage done to the victim. The Prisons We Deserve
  • I invariably order too much and end up feeling gluttonous, but no matter - there's no substitute for excellent sushi when you're in the mood for it.
  • Yet in one of the cruel absurdities of legacy, Ehrlich's name is invariably linked with a book that he and Anne Ehrlich, his wife and long-time collaborator (and the corecipient of many of his prizes), wrote in a few weeks in the late 1960s, at a time when the world seemed to be coming undone. SEEDMAGAZINE.COM
  • The diet of a malnourished person may be high in starchy foods but is invariably low in protein and essential minerals and vitamins. Geography Basic Facts
  • In the prior process, you had to staff a whole purchasing department and send a requisition in to them, and you'd bring in too much invariably because you had to stock up on materials.
  • As its signs represent native syllables (such as sa and ke), TRANSLITERATION almost invariably produces phonetic change.
  • Now no man may call a palaver of all small chiefs unless he notifies the government of his intention, for the government is jealous of self-appointed parliaments, for when men meet together in public conference, however innocent may be its first cause, talk invariably drifts to war, just as when they assemble and talk in private it drifts womanward. Bones Being Further Adventures in Mr. Commissioner Sanders' Country
  • On visitations they spoke mainly to priests, who almost invariably assured them that all was well, and to local notables holding administrative office in parishes.
  • Invariably it is our key workers we equip with mobile technology and it is important they do not become demotivated by it.
  • During its turbulent history it had known dozens of presidents, but their efforts to rule had been fruitless, invariably with blood flowing.
  • At the back is a bank of fine silt that is invariably stirred up by the first few divers who venture inside, so try to be first there if you can!
  • It will almost invariably include a salad of some kind. Times, Sunday Times
  • They invariably come in colours that look like somebody mopped up the floor of the dye room with them. Cheeseburger Gothic » Ladies Lounge
  • He is attentive and thoughtful, always willing to do his share of the housework and invariably cheerful.
  • No longer will the pressure invariably be upon those brilliant backs to bail out the pack. Times, Sunday Times
  • He, who neither drank nor smoked, who never wasted the weight of his arms in an embrace, nor the touch of his lips a second longer than the most perfunctory of kisses, who was invariably up before cockcrow and asleep ere the kerosene lamp had a tenth emptied itself, and who never thought to die, was dead even more quickly than Brother Hal and Prince Lilolilo. ON THE MAKALOA MAT
  • The results of each census are invariably challenged by states and ethnic groups that believe they have been undercounted and therefore will be shortchanged in the sharing of the national pie.
  • Even when companies didn't report negative three-year tax rates, those with exceptionally low numbers invariably benefited from some sort of nonrecurring tax benefits.
  • Many of these victims tried to apply blue antifouling paint to their boat's bottom but invariably get more on themselves than their boat.
  • Then she has a sleep, as she has invariably done something fabulous the night before. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hotels charge corkage for opening and serving the wine which invariably means it costs the same as the house wine.
  • His university lectures on etymology and linguistics were standing room only, and he invariably stayed late to answer a barrage of questions.
  • Then while he sat on a beer keg until he should be in breath again the unwinded Spike would skip the rope -- a girl's skipping rope -- or shadow-box about the room with intricate dance steps, raining quick blows upon a ghostly boxer who was invariably beaten; or with smaller gloves he would cause the inflated bag to play lively tunes upon the ceiling of its support. The Wrong Twin
  • In addition, superconductivity was not particularly well understood at the time, especially the effects that would cause a magnet to dramatically and suddenly lose its superconducting powers, a phenomenon known as a "quench" that is invariably accompanied by a loud bang and a scurry to find the exit as the magnetic energy is suddenly dissipated. Tevatron collider falls silent today after 26 years of smash hits
  • I have tried cellaring these wines and almost invariably the results are disappointing.
  • His half day off was invariably spent tinkering about the stuffy little flat -- painting, nailing up shelves, mending a broken window shade, puttying a window, playing with his pasty little boy, aged sixteen months, and his pasty little girl, aged three years. Gigolo
  • The charm which true politeness sheds over its possessor, is not easily described; yet it is felt by every one, and invariably responded to by the best feelings of their nature. A Manual of Etiquette with Hints on Politeness and Good Breeding
  • Our heightened sensitivity to cold makes a chilly draught invariably feel more uncomfortable than a warm breeze. Times, Sunday Times
  • Scotland invariably went _deiseal_, or to the right, at every meeting of importance. The Mysteries of All Nations Rise and Progress of Superstition, Laws Against and Trials of Witches, Ancient and Modern Delusions Together With Strange Customs, Fables, and Tales
  • The finely laciniated foliage of = A. plumosus = is greatly prized for bouquets, and the plant invariably commands attention as a decorative subject on the table or in the conservatory. The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition
  • The Masters invariably coincides with a wind chill factor in this country.
  • It is why the wounded who leave the field on stretchers invariably receive consoling applause from all quarters, friend and foe. Times, Sunday Times
  • [44] The farmers in Manjarabad invariably tack on the word "Gouda" to their names, and it seems to answer for our Mr. [45] The natives imagine that every man's fate is written in invisible characters on his forehead. Gold, Sport, and Coffee Planting in Mysore
  • Rising tax exactions invariably dampened the spirits of charity.
  • Our Cuban hosts invariably put a great deal of effort into making meals attractive and appetizing.
  • Then the punishment of individuals invariably took account of the harm or damage done to the victim. The Prisons We Deserve
  • Invariably, they are sent at night by someone well past the legal limit for safe driving.
  • Invariably, the play is enacted at home, perhaps in front of parents and siblings who might find it all very amusing.
  • The broadcast invariably communicated something about their great society, envy of the world, then gave a rambling weather report, and ended with frocked maidens dancing a polka. Lorelei Kelly: Meet the New Soviets: Gingrich, Walker, Breitbart
  • This was the kind of thinking that underlay the inspirational movies produced by Warner Brothers in the 1930s for which Variety coined the term "biopic" – films about medical pioneers, democratic revolutionaries and other movers and shakers who changed the world, invariably men MGM's Madame Curie was a rare exception. The Iron Lady – review
  • You tread loathingly an indescribable earthen floor, and your eye, on entering the apartment, is arrested by a nameless production of the fictile art, certainly not of _Etruscan_ form, which is invariably placed on the _bolster_ of the truck-bed destined presently for your devoted head. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 56, No. 345, July, 1844
  • In this case, however, mutations affecting the expression of any one factor invariably affect two adjacent parts of the flower.
  • One of legends concerning Saint George is the famous dragon story, with which he is invariably portrayed.
  • Still, as more handsets invariably take on PDA functionality, it's hard to see PDAs out-selling smartphones for very much longer.
  • His eyes are invariably shown as hazel in colour and widely set apart; his hair heavy, curled, and falling to his shoulders; his lips very full, his nose large and "beaked," and his brow, or "great head," of unusual height and breadth. Shakespeare's Lost Years in London, 1586-1592
  • In spite of the fact that the girls and women who commit neonaticide reflect the full range of socio-economic backgrounds, when one considers their personal financial resources, as distinct from those of their families, they are invariably quite vulnerable. n10 This factor is quite important because these women are so convinced that having a baby will jeopardize their current living situations. Neonaticide : When Mothers Kill Their Newborns
  • And these narrative solutions are invariably negative or evasive.
  • Singularity is almost invariably a clue. The more featureless and commonplace a crime is, the more difficult is it to bring it home. 
  • It goes without saying that shoppers who are ill-advised enough to carry them at all invariably have a purse or wallet bulging with them.
  • We may assume, likewise, that at Sippar, Uruk, Ur, and Larsa the zikkurat was the center of a considerable group of buildings, while at Babylon in the days of her greatest power, the temple area of E-Sagila must have presented the appearance of a little city by itself, shut off from the rest of the town by a wall which invariably enclosed the sacred quarter. The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria
  • Instead of going home to mammy for lunch invariably the kids will hit the chipper.
  • Agencies and landlords are not legally allowed to discriminate on grounds of race but ways are invariably found around this.
  • When people think of building demolition, they almost invariably conjure up visions of spectacular implosions with large buildings collapsing in seconds.
  • Artists invariably doubled as gold or silversmiths, bronze casters, stonecutters and carvers, carpenters, plasterers, and wood-carvers, as well as painters and sculptors.
  • Parents and educators invariably note poor self-esteem as a central characteristic of work-inhibited students.
  • Invariably, she says, her patients are "elated" -- some so much that they come back for multiple sessions. Fetal Photos
  • I looked at the CDC site, and it seems that the disease is not invariably fatal.
  • By their very nature, novice chases are invariably hair-raising affairs. Great Sporting Failures
  • That was then and now is now, when younger and more tender farmed abalones are almost invariably what you are likely to get, unless you consort with poachers in New Zealand and they give you some of the paua they pry from the ocean floor with stealth and special iron tools. Abalone delicious
  • She remembered with naughty satisfaction how rain invariably straightened Jennie Perkins's frizzes, and was glad, _glad_ that it did. Ladies-In-Waiting
  • His argument that the media invariably and inaccurately portrays single women as pathetic is a little hackneyed.
  • Yes, I know that archives exist, but archives are invariably dusty, filled with cobwebs and virtually uninhabited.
  • High doses of vitamin C may loosen the bowels, though this effect invariably abates once the dose is suitably reduced.
  • Dear Sir, -- I have now, past dispute, made out three distinct species of the willow-wrens (_motacillae trochili_) which constantly and invariably use distinct notes. The Natural History of Selborne, Vol. 1
  • Water logging and floods are invariably the fallout during rains.
  • And, yes, television newscasters now end their news bulletin with Allah Hafiz, invariably on the state-owned TV channel but also on other channels.
  • They are sometimes pugilistic, invariably dominant, and often greedy for power.
  • There is no better way of testing whether pain has been felt than by taking the lacerated or contused gums of the patient between the index finger and thumb and making a gentle pressure to collapse the alveolar borders; invariably, they will cry out lustily, _that is pain_! Scientific American Supplement, No. 275, April 9, 1881
  • They have shown that two quart bottles of ketchup invariably sell for twice as much as one quart bottles of ketchup except for deviations traceable to transactions costs, and that one cannot get a bargain on ketchup by buying and combining ingredi-ents once one takes account of transactions costs. Matthew Yglesias » Efficient Markets Hypothesis Rhetoric
  • Both the Bible and history demonstrate that such a measure of blessing is almost invariably related to the means employed.
  • The attempt to act in accordance with a system of ideas is invariably denounced as ideological, fanatical, utopian or millenarian.
  • The most prominent symptoms of polypoid growths are hemorrhage, which is almost invariably present, leucorrhea, pain, backache, and a sense of weight and dragging in the pelvis. The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser in Plain English or, Medicine Simplified, 54th ed., One Million, Six Hundred and Fifty Thousand
  • It proposes that you can make up your mind about something, and be invariably correct, in an instant; that snap judgment is often a more effective tool than detailed analysis.
  • People were almost invariably friendly and good-natured. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is also interesting to see that specimens of the latter group invariably show smooth surface and indistinct dorsal furrows.
  • _ This appears a startling statement and a sweeping; but, as a matter of fact, the Eastern girl is not left, like her Western sister, to flirt and frivol into middle age in single "cussedness," but almost invariably becomes a respectable married lady at ten or twelve, and drapes her lovely, but not over clean, head in the mantle of old sacking, which it is _de rigueur_ for matrons to adopt. A Holiday in the Happy Valley with Pen and Pencil
  • Invariably, this also coincides with the end of the Stock Exchange settlement period.
  • Winston’s voice indicated that he would rather it wait until morning, but “major problem” was a phrase invariably granted an immediate hearing, a rule Lansing seemed aware of. The Big Scam
  • The cake was made of lotus root with pellets of chicken, shrimp and pork and invariably tea.
  • Please note, for older dinghies and keelboats the measurements are almost invariably in feet and inches.
  • Nobody said a word about partridges; but it was remarkable that from each carriage that arrived there was taken a long mahogany case, followed by a tin canister and a powder flask; and that each new-comer, in the course of the first evening, invariably asked if the harvest were well in, and if the birds were tolerably strong and numerous. The Semi-Attached Couple
  • Those who come with an open mind and see the place for themselves invariably return home as ambassadors for our province.
  • They suffer social ostracism, economic deprivation, educational backwardness and they invariably fall prey to most serious forms of persecution in society - rape, killings, mutilation, arson, destruction of property.
  • In medicine, measurement and observation often lead to diagnosis and cure, though not invariably so.
  • Her delivery, too, is eerily good – a show of demure solicitude, invariably overtaken by steely, wild-eyed stridency. The Iron Lady: first screening
  • However, the effort is invariably rewarded with the sense of well-being that comes from communing with the glories of nature.
  • Inferior strudels have a thick nutty paste which is invariably too sticky and too sweet.

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