The conclusion is inescapable. This was an accidental drug overdose and not a suicide.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES►the inescapable/inevitable conclusion
(=one that is very obvious, although you may not like it)· The inescapable conclusion was that the country needed a change of leadership.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN►conclusion
· Is the inescapable conclusion, therefore, that the régime finds itself between the devil and the deep blue sea?· For those with limited experience of overseas Test matches, especially in the subcontinent, this is the inescapable conclusion.· The inescapable conclusion was that people were continually managing to think it up for themselves.
►fact
· Chief amongst these had been the inescapable fact that she must get rid of Rose Cottage.· Since the beginning of time, work has been for many people a terrible, inescapable fact of life.· But the myth was more entertaining when dull but inescapable facts were omitted.· Beyond grief and shock, there is the inescapable fact that life is unalterably changed.· It completely beggared belief, yet it was an inescapable fact.· I believe that the Government understand those inescapable facts.· It is more an argument against inescapable facts about heredity itself!
Word family
WORD FAMILYnounescapeescapismescapeeescapologistadjectiveescapedinescapableescapistverbescapeadverbinescapably
an inescapable fact or situation is one that you cannot avoid or ignore: She didn’t want to confront the inescapable fact that she would have to sell the house. The inescapable conclusion is that he was murdered by someone in his own family.—inescapably adverb