Ineluctable in a sentence as an adjective

From the ball's point of view, "downnwardness", an ineluctable constant, has ceased to exist.

Much government is useful and good, but it's an ineluctable law that powers are abused.

Read the science/tech magazines from the 50s and 60s -- travel to the planets was imminent and ineluctable.

And, in contrast, there is an ineluctable attraction to finding a new name for daughterboard for each one of these new SBCs.

If only they would accept the human condition as their ineluctable fate: they would then learn the wisdom of dying, and welcome Death with happiness and joy!

If these problems are so obviously ineluctable, why talk around them instead of detailing or even naming any?

It was very much a thing in the 80s and most of the channels of the 80s are still strong although there is the ineluctable transition of all basic cables towards showing nothing but Law and Order reruns.

History is obsessed with narratives, and there is an ineluctable requirement, when doing history, to create a story where earlier "facts" leads to later "facts" in a hypothesis of cause and effect.

You think that globalization is destined to continue forever, that interstate war is impossible, and that the onward march of democracy is ineluctable?

But your original observation was:> But what I didn't understand was that mostly we made money when other people lost it.... and that's an ineluctable outcome of any financial transaction.

Merely accelerates the ineluctable march of capital, which you can conceive of a conceptual mathematical-material virus kept in check so far by social forces and technological constraints.

If you want me to agree with you that it's preferable to die than to be noninvasively and incidentally spied upon, it helps that cause not at all simply to say the truth of your perspective on the matter is as ineluctable as gravitation - this rather fails to convince.

You're admitting what most anti-copyright people don't want to admit – if instead of bookshops we only had the Emergency Library, certain classes of works would indeed go away, including most good fiction, not to mention history, biography, reportage etc. You say that's "just what happens" like it's some ineluctable natural process, but none of this is preordained.

The answer is so obvious, we have to launch a planetary program to implement it: Our only hope is to upload our consciousnesses into highly durable nanomachine "crystals" and launch enough of these devices that some will be discovered by similarly capable civilizations that can be convinced of the Copernican Principle's ineluctable truth and will therefore perpetuate this process.

Ineluctable definitions

adjective

impossible to avoid or evade:"inescapable conclusion"; "an ineluctable destiny"; "an unavoidable accident"

See also: inescapable unavoidable