(adv.) Without possibility of escape or evasion; unavoidably; certainly.
Example Sentences:
(1) These immunocytochemical studies clearly demonstrated that cells encountered within the fibrous intimal thickening in the vein graft were inevitably smooth muscle cell in origin.
(2) A second Scottish referendum has turned from a highly probable event into an almost inevitable one.
(3) "Attempts to quantify existential risk inevitably involve a large helping of subjective judgment.
(4) That price is inevitably going to increase over the years and will be another millstone around the BBC’s neck.
(5) "Today a federal district court put up a roadblock on a path constructed by 21 federal court rulings over the last year – a path that inevitably leads to nationwide marriage equality," said Sarah Warbelow, legal director for the Human Rights Campaign.
(6) While there would inevitably be some interaction, Gibbs said, "I do not think the president approaches it like a boxing match."
(7) Instead of inevitable defeat there is uncertain cop-out.
(8) Abigail Aiken, an assistant professor at the University of Texas at Austin, said the numbers inevitably underrepresented the demand.
(9) We've all been living ahead of ourselves, so in many ways this was inevitable.
(10) The question of ethics inevitably arises, and should be considered before a concrete situation arises which leaves no time for reflection.
(11) In such circumstances faith in the project inevitably ebbs among the faithful.
(12) Lloyds said it would achieve many of the job cuts through making less use of contractors and voluntary severance but admitted that some compulsory redundancies may be inevitable.
(13) Inevitably, and necessarily, Labour has appeared split as the coalition has captured broad public support for its assault on the deficit.
(14) His message suggested a Grexit was now inevitable as he stressed the need for EU humanitarian programmes to forestall social implosion in Greece.
(15) The increase in movement of people both within the highlands of New Guinea and also to and fro between holo- and hyperendemic lowland areas and the highlands by policemen and semi-skilled personnel in one direction and by labourers in the other, together with a great increase in potential breeding sites, were virtually inevitable consequences of the development process as the intense communalism and geographical isolation of the highland people was broken down.
(16) This has improved the capacity of the neuroanaesthetist to mitigate the inevitable fluctuations which occur and prevent their ill effects.
(17) The competition between candidates is an inevitable consequence of the fact that animals cannot 'do more than one thing at a time', and is envisaged as taking place in the behavioural final common path.
(18) Nicola Dandridge, chief executive of Universities UK, which represents Britain's higher education sector, said the laws of demand and supply were inevitably forcing universities to examine their resources: "Some universities may face difficult decisions in relation to maintaining course provision in certain subject areas."
(19) Phagocytic killing in the presence of each monoclonal antibody paralleled the increase in chemiluminescence, suggesting that for this variant killing was an inevitable consequence of the interaction of polymorphonuclear leukocytes with gonococci opsonized with anti-pilus antibodies.
(20) It therefore seems inevitable that the region will have fallen back into a new recession in the third quarter And here's a summary of the data, showing that only two countries expanded: Ireland: 51.8 (2-month high) The Netherlands: 50.7 (13-month high) Germany: 47.4 (6-month high) Italy: 45.7 (6-month high) Austria: 45.1 (39-month low) Spain: 44.5 (6 month low) France: 42.7 (41-month low) Greece: 42.2 (4-month high) 9.07am BST EUROZONE RECESSION ALL BUT CERTAIN The eurozone's manufacturing sector shrank again in September, making a double-dip recession all but certain.
Perforce
Definition:
(adv.) By force; of necessary; at any rate.
(v. t.) To force; to compel.
Example Sentences:
(1) They are fleeing, perforce, the most awful conditions imaginable: a vicious, endless civil war that sees schools targeted with barrel bombs, communities assaulted with chemical weapons, and whole cities destroyed in a conflict between lawless jihadi fanatics and regime forces fighting for survival.
(2) At the same time it should be made clear that more subtle correlations may exist, other than those herein shown, which perforce cannot be demonstrated or proved because of the restrictive unreliability of the clinical observations.
(3) Probably the happening of most moment during that 1973 midsummer fortnight was the raucous overture of something rare and special when every day some hundred or so shrieking schoolgirls began following around the concourse and demanding autographs from a slim, blond, bemused Swede with a headband and an ice-blue faraway gaze, just 17 but, perforce, seeded No6.
(4) As the large effects were discovered, new associations were perforce of smaller magnitude.
(5) The ethics of animal experimentation are perforce centered on the experimenter.
(6) "This Speaker's actions are this prime minister's responsibility and this Speaker's standards perforce are this prime minister's standards, unless she has the responsibility and the decency to remove this Speaker from this high office," Abbott told parliament.
(7) This analysis suggests that a person in whose tissue an early genetic change occurs during ontogeny will perforce have a markedly higher number of cells in single sectors containing the necessary set of genetic changes.
(8) In this endeavour, traditional herbal medicines must perforce be granted the benefits of modern science and technology to serve future global needs.
(9) Predictions of the consequences of accidental releases of radionuclides have in the past, perforce, relied upon models of environmental transfer.
(10) In the LEW----LBN-F1 combination, the survival of recipients subject perforce to a fatal graft-versus-host reaction was not influenced by the type of venous drainage used (CV-D: 14.1 days; PV-D: 14.8 days).
(11) A cursory appraisal of the ontological status of the unborn in the Judeo-Christian tradition delineates ethical norms that do not perforce correspond with the abovementioned juridical praxis.
(12) The white-doctor: black-patient relationship, perforce the rule, is distinctly problematic in this socio-political climate.
(13) Many indicators have shown considerable progress, but changes are perforce slow.
(14) Cameron must perforce feed his Eurosceptic base and Miliband must occasionally look like he can defeat the Tories.
(15) It is rather obvious that design of therapeutic drugs for specific cardiovascular problems must perforce take such factors into careful consideration.
(16) It is concluded that interventions designed to inhibit the biosynthesis of lung connective tissue do not perforce inhibit the development of cadmium-induced pulmonary changes in the rat.
(17) "This Speaker's actions are this prime minister's responsibility and this Speaker's standards perforce are this prime minister's standards, unless she has the responsibility and the decency to remove this Speaker from this high office," Abbott told the house.
(18) The implication that the measured transverse motion of the cochlear partition could provide sufficient distortion to account for the main features of the histograms has a two-part corollary: that the mechanism which produces severe overall saturation does not add much compressive distortion to the waveform passed radially to IHC and primary fibers, and that the IHC is kept operating chiefly in an approximately linear part of its range, by a prior gain control that is, perforce, cochlear and mechanical.
(19) Changes are perforce slow, and economic pressure represents both a challenge and a constraint.
(20) We conclude from our work and that of others that at high baseline negative appendectomy rates much improvement is possible without causing higher perforation rates, whereas at relatively low negative appendectomy rates, further decreases will, perforce, cause more perforations, a poor trade-off in the opinion of most investigators.