单词 | inevitably |
释义 | inevitably (ɪnevɪtəbli ) adverb [usually ADVERB with verb, ADVERB adjective] If something will inevitably happen, it is certain to happen and cannot be prevented or avoided. Technological changes will inevitably lead to unemployment. Inevitably, the proposal is running into difficulties. Synonyms: unavoidably, naturally, necessarily, surely Collocations: inevitably slow As the labour market continues to mature and to reach full employment, monthly job gains will inevitably slow. Times, Sunday Times The downturn in equity markets and the reduced availability of debt financing means that the pace of realisations will inevitably slow. Times, Sunday Times He argued that their rise was fueled by mobilizing resources and that their growth rates would inevitably slow. Retrieved from Wikipedia CC BY-SA 3.0 Although underlying growth has inevitably slowed since the start of last year, it has yet to head backwards. Times, Sunday Times When the pace inevitably slows to a city crawl, the colourful cabin isn't a bad place to be. Times, Sunday Times Our separation of these two lives will lead inevitably to the impoverishment and irrelevance of both. Christianity Today The existence of stress need not lead inevitably to the creation of legions of counsellors. Times, Sunday Times The successful fusion of democracy and growth on the sub-continent has helped to underpin the argument that increasing prosperity elsewhere would lead inevitably to a clamour for democracy. Times, Sunday Times But teachers' leaders said that this policy would lead inevitably to some schools being ranked lower through no fault of their own. Times, Sunday Times He thinks that severe cost savings in the public sector will lead inevitably to job cuts. Times, Sunday Times Translations: Chinese: 必然发生地 Japanese: 必然的に |
随便看 |
|
英语词典包含147115条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。