Definition of inherently in English:
inherently
adverb ɪnˈhɛrəntliɪnˈhɪərəntli
In a permanent, essential, or characteristic way.
the work is inherently dangerous
his theories are inherently flawed
criticism is inherently threatening
Example sentencesExamples
- Cotton production, like many other agricultural enterprises, is inherently risky.
- The refusal of the public is a position taken in relation to the inherently public nature of architecture.
- The external diagonal steel structure uses triangular forms to be inherently strong, permitting a flexible column-free interior space.
- There is nothing inherently special about these greenhouses themselves.
- Fortunately, digital art alters the playing field in ways that inherently challenge curatorial control.
- There is something inherently uncanny about the medium of relief.
- The academy was quick to note that "genetic engineering is not an inherently hazardous process."
- Displaced just a bit from the vertical axis of the triangle, this stripe drastically destabilizes an inherently stable shape.
- The endless combination of forms possible in the composition of these towns makes them inherently fascinating.
- Every manager of an inherently slow site blames everybody else, including "busy highways, clogged servers," etc.