Without possibility of escape or evasion; unavoidably; certainly.
Without possibility of escape or evasion; unavoidably; certainly.
Inevitably means certain to happen. It inevitably rains when we plan a picnic. Her good mood inevitably turns sour if she misses lunch.
It inevitably rains on days when we are off work. Whenever you wash your car, a bird inevitably poops on the finish.
Inevitably has 5 syllables. In-ev-it-ab-ly
They are not inevitably false, but they are necessarily incomplete.
The overworked clerk inevitably gave up and went home. The Europeans inevitably won the struggle for westward expansion.
avoidably
unstoppable
The cast of Inevitably - 2007 includes: Spyros Athinaiou as Death Makis Tsiligaridis as Xaris
why does an organizational hierarchy inevitably have an effect on our interactions with others and give examples
No. "Inevitably" is an adverb and "adversity" is a noun. Even if their meanings were remotely similar, and they are not, they would still be different parts of speech.
It means that when two or more people are present one of them will inevitably take the lead in any given situation.