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  1. Dictionary
    inexorable
    /ɪnˈɛks(ə)rəb(ə)l/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. An inexorable person is hard-headed and cannot be convinced to change their mind, no matter what. You can also say that a process, like the progress of a deadly illness, is inexorable because it can't be stopped.

  3. INEXORABLE definition: 1. continuing without any possibility of being stopped: 2. continuing without any possibility of…. Learn more.

  4. It's a fitting etymology for inexorable. You can beseech and implore until you're blue in the face, but that won't have any effect on something that's inexorable. Inexorable has been a part of the English language since the 1500s. Originally, it was often applied to people or sometimes to personified things, as in "deaf and inexorable laws."

  5. INEXORABLE meaning: 1. continuing without any possibility of being stopped: 2. continuing without any possibility of…. Learn more.

  6. Definition of inexorable adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. You use inexorable to describe a process which cannot be prevented from continuing or progressing. ...the seemingly inexorable rise in unemployment. American English : inexorable / ɪˈnɛksərəbəl /

  8. Inexorable definition: unyielding; unalterable. See examples of INEXORABLE used in a sentence.

  9. continuing without any possibility of being stopped: the inexorable progress of civilization. inexorably. adverb. These events led inexorably to war. (Definition of inexorable from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Translations of inexorable. in Chinese (Traditional) 不可阻攔的… See more. in Chinese (Simplified) 不可阻拦的…

  10. inexorable meaning, definition, what is inexorable: an inexorable process cannot be stopped: Learn more.

  11. 1. Impossible to stop, alter, or resist; inevitable: an inexorable fate; an inexorable law of nature. 2. Not capable of being persuaded by entreaty; relentless: an inexorable opponent. [Latin inexōrābilis : in-, not; see in-1 + exōrābilis, pliant (from exōrāre, to prevail upon : ex-, intensive pref.; see ex- + ōrāre, to argue ).]