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Definition of Inevitableness
1. Noun. The quality of being unavoidable.
Generic synonyms: Certainty, Foregone Conclusion, Sure Thing
Derivative terms: Inevitable, Inevitable, Inevitable, Inevitable
Definition of Inevitableness
1. n. The state of being unavoidable; certainty to happen.
Definition of Inevitableness
1. Noun. The characteristic of being inevitable; inevitability. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Inevitableness
1. [n -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Inevitableness
Literary usage of Inevitableness
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Introduction to Social Ethics: The Social Conscience in a Democracy by John Moffatt Mecklin (1920)
"THE inevitableness OF CHANGE It must be remarked first that change is inevitable.
... The inevitableness of change appears even in the sphere of morals. ..."
2. An Introduction to Social Ethics: The Social Conscience in a Democracy by John Moffatt Mecklin (1920)
"Society, like all living things, is never static. What is the significance of
change for the problem of moral progress? §4. THE inevitableness OF CHANGE It ..."
3. The History of British India by James Mill, Horace Hayman Wilson (1848)
"Reflections on the War, — its inevitableness, — the Mode of its Prosecution, —
Value of Acquisitions. BOOK HI. THE situation of the British forces at ..."
4. The Social Unrest: Studies in Labor and Socialist Movements by John Graham Brooks (1903)
"... CHAPTER V THE inevitableness OF THE SOCIAL QUESTION A VETERAN in the trade-union
movement of Massachusetts said at a dinner of the Twentieth Century ..."
5. The Evolution of Modern Germany by William Harbutt Dawson (1911)
"... question—Attitude of the Social Democrats—The Stuttgart Congress of 1907—The
inevitableness of a colonial army—England and German colonial ambitions. ..."
6. The Red Reign: The True Story of an Adventurous Year in Russia by Kellogg Durland (1908)
"... called Russian revolution—Its varied aspects—inevitableness of revolution in
Russia—Causes—The disease of autocracy—Insincerity of manifesto of October, ..."
7. American History: For Use in Secondary Schools by Roscoe Lewis Ashley (1907)
"The inevitableness of War. — News of the opposition to the acts of parliament
and warlike preparations in New England created a profound impression in Great ..."