VS.

Inevitable vs. Inexorable

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Inevitableadjective

Impossible to avoid or prevent.

‘We were going so fast that the collision was inevitable.’;

Inexorableadjective

Impossible to prevent or stop; inevitable.

Inevitableadjective

Predictable, or always happening.

‘My outburst met with the inevitable punishment.’;

Inexorableadjective

Unable to be persuaded; relentless; unrelenting.

Inevitablenoun

Something that is predictable, necessary, or cannot be avoided.

Inexorableadjective

Adamant; severe.

Inevitableadjective

Not evitable; incapable of being shunned; unavoidable; certain.

‘It was inevitable; it was necessary; it was planted in the nature of things.’;

Inexorableadjective

not to be placated or appeased or moved by entreaty;

‘grim determination’; ‘grim necessity’; ‘Russia's final hour, it seemed, approached with inexorable certainty’; ‘relentless persecution’; ‘the stern demands of parenthood’;

Inevitableadjective

Irresistible.

Inexorableadjective

not capable of being swayed or diverted from a course; unsusceptible to persuasion;

‘he is adamant in his refusal to change his mind’; ‘Cynthia was inexorable; she would have none of him’; ‘an intransigent conservative opposed to every liberal tendancy’;

Inevitablenoun

an unavoidable event;

‘don't argue with the inevitable’;

Inevitableadjective

incapable of being avoided or prevented;

‘the inevitable result’;

Inevitableadjective

invariably occurring or appearing;

‘the inevitable changes of the seasons’;

Inevitableadjective

certain to happen; unavoidable

‘war was inevitable’;

Inevitableadjective

so frequently experienced or seen that it is completely predictable

‘the inevitable letter from the bank’;

Inevitablenoun

a situation that is unavoidable

‘by the morning he had accepted the inevitable’;

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