inescapable - use in sentences

Modifying Another Word

  • seemingly: Looking for the secret of the living heart, he was driven by a seemingly inescapable logic toward the dead, dismantled heart.
  • almost: Such incidental benefit seems to be almost inescapable with non-charitable organizations receiving this service.
  • apparently: We face an apparently inescapable future: technology out of control.
  • so: External pressures, internal temptations so inescapable that we just can't sustain our faith?
  • ultimately: Nevertheless, his combat experience must, as it did with millions of others, have proved indelible and ultimately inescapable.
  • thus: Furthermore, violence and retribution are shown as inherent in the illness itself and thus inescapable.

Adjective complement with noun phrase

  • make: The meteorite from Mars once again makes the age-old question inescapable: are we alone in the universe?

Modifies a noun

  • conclusion: Anyone who has followed at all the pattern of events in Iraq in recent years must come to the same inescapable conclusion.
  • fact: There is an inescapable fact about waste it costs money.
  • necessity: The inescapable necessity, however, which lay behind the death of Christ we may discover in the first pages of the Bible.
  • logic: Looking for the secret of the living heart, he was driven by a seemingly inescapable logic toward the dead, dismantled heart.
  • truth: The inescapable truth of discontent shown at the World Trade Organization is only going to increase.
  • reality: Positive Measures: " Sticks " are an inescapable reality in fight against proliferation.

Used with adjective complement

  • seem: It may be a belief or idea which repels us, which we are unwilling to accept but which seems inescapable.
  • become: A little further on, the dominance of poison became inescapable on the garden " care " shelves.
  • prove: However, his claustrophobic world and the huge pressure to conform proves inescapable.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.