释义 |
ineradicable /ˌɪnɪˈradɪkəb(ə)l /adjectiveUnable to be destroyed or removed: ineradicable hostility...- Postmodernism is based on a set of assumptions, deriving ultimately from Nietzsche, which treat social domination as a permanent and ineradicable feature of human existence.
- Rawls' discussion of the distinction between liberal and decent peoples, for example, recognizes that concrete historical differences among peoples are inevitable and ineradicable.
- The Great War was something that happened to real people and had ineradicable effects on their families and the nations to which they belonged.
Derivativesineradicably adverb ...- However prosperous and ‘civilised’ the world gets, there is an ineradicably evil aspect to human nature that will always find an outlet somewhere.
- Now that Britain has become so ineradicably multicultural, he says, there is no justification for it to be ‘British’ any more.
- The Utopian ideal of a just society was for Orwell something which ‘seems to haunt human imagination ineradicably and in all ages, whether it is called the Kingdom of Heaven or the classless society’.
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