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irreversibly

[ US /ˌɪɹɪˈvɝsəbɫi/ ]
[ UK /ɪɹɪvˈɜːsəbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an irreversible manner
    this old tradition is irreversibly disappearing

How To Use irreversibly In A Sentence

  • A series of offensives in early 1918 achieved initial success but ultimately failed to break the Allied line, and by summer, with the Americans coming in droves, the tide of the war had turned irreversibly against the Central Powers. How Wars end
  • Irreversibly blind adults who cannot be helped through surgery are referred to rehabilitation programmes, while children are encouraged to attend integrated schools.
  • He was an only child, irreversibly Italian in a WASP world, scarred by forceps and acne and a mastoid operation, so skinny he nearly disappeared behind his microphone. When Sinatra had the world on a string
  • This is the credo by which I am genetically and irreversibly bound to live.
  • It does this by irreversibly blocking the enzyme cyclooxygenase (COX), which catalyzes the conversion of arachidonic acid to endoperoxide compounds. Aspirin: effects, poisoning
  • Julius Caesar was a strong leader for the Romans who changed the course of the history of the Greco - Roman world decisively and irreversibly.
  • These soils tend to have low levels of plant nutrients, harden irreversibly when exposed to repeated cycles of wetting and drying, and form nodules or rock-like layers called ironstone or laterite. 5. How plants live and grow
  • The system was, perhaps irreversibly, biased towards the selection of middle-class children.
  • The toxin irreversibly binds to presynaptic cholinergic receptors at motor nerve terminals and is subsequently internalized.
  • The frightening specter of the dawn of some kind of Terminator Age is conjured up in the title an e-book by Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, both professors at MIT, Race Against The Machine: How the Digital Revolution is Accelerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy. Robert D. Atkinson, Ph.D.: Antiquated Economic Policies Are Killing Jobs More Than Robots
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