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单词 ineradicable
释义

Definition of ineradicable in English:

ineradicable

adjective ˌɪnɪˈradɪkəb(ə)lˌɪnəˈrædəkəb(ə)l
  • Unable to be destroyed or removed.

    ineradicable hostility
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Official corruption has been targeted since the early 1980s but seems ineradicable.
    • He spoke English as he wrote it, with a fondness for imagery, even for little parables - but with an ineradicable French accent that was as much part of his persona as his burly frame and curly hair.
    • The Great War was something that happened to real people and had ineradicable effects on their families and the nations to which they belonged.
    • Here is the seeming ineradicable fallacy that multiplying currency increases wealth and prosperity.
    • The libertarian idea of society would hold true even if a degree of coercion were absolutely necessary and ineradicable: the more authority residing in civil society rather than the state, the better.
    • Once established, it is an ineradicable weed and it is now naturalized all over Europe and in the USA.
    • For him, faith was ineradicable as long as humans were in fear of personal annihilation - a contingency that seems likely to persist.
    • The Complete Prestige Recordings is a mammoth 11 CD set in tribute to a jazz giant that left behind an ineradicable mark in the annals of modern jazz music.
    • Rawls' discussion of the distinction between liberal and decent peoples, for example, recognizes that concrete historical differences among peoples are inevitable and ineradicable.
    • Sadly, a potential for communal hatred seems to be an ineradicable part of human nature.
    • I'm looking for evidence to counter the belief that war or the threat thereof are ineradicable aspects of our culture.
    • Although such instruments are flexible and simple to use, their ink leaves a deep and ineradicable stain.
    • Converts accepted their own ineradicable sinfulness, but they were psychologically freed by the proclamation that God nevertheless considered them innocent or righteous.
    • And unlike sidewalk vendors, Internet operations do leave traces - sometimes ineradicable ones.
    • The idea of a primordial, ineradicable Guilt is not original to Heidegger.
    • Even if the differences are cultural, rather than biological, they are ineradicable.
    • In fact, one might say that successful economic growth will inevitably lead to the perception of important and mostly ineradicable inequalities.
    • Pacs, one of the first such programs in the nation, was founded on the premise that war and other forms of violence are neither inevitable nor ineradicable, despite their omnipresence in human history.
    • Frances Donaldson attributes Wodehouse's attitude to the war to an ineradicable immaturity, an inability to feel any emotional response to the events taking place in Flanders.
    • Postmodernism is based on a set of assumptions, deriving ultimately from Nietzsche, which treat social domination as a permanent and ineradicable feature of human existence.
    Synonyms
    lasting, enduring, indefinite, continuing, perpetual, everlasting, eternal, abiding, constant, persistent, irreparable, irreversible, lifelong, indissoluble, indelible, standing, perennial, unending, endless, never-ending, immutable, unchangeable, unalterable, invariable, unchanging, changeless, undying, imperishable, indestructible

Derivatives

  • ineradicably

  • adverb
    • However prosperous and ‘civilised’ the world gets, there is an ineradicably evil aspect to human nature that will always find an outlet somewhere.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As long as Darwinism is taken to be as ineradicably materialistic as it appears to Ruse, it will remain logically irreconcilable with Christianity.
      • The conjunction of portrait miniature and jeweled container located the portrait ineradicably in the domain of luxury, and hence also of commerce.
      • The Utopian ideal of a just society was for Orwell something which ‘seems to haunt human imagination ineradicably and in all ages, whether it is called the Kingdom of Heaven or the classless society’.
      • Now that Britain has become so ineradicably multicultural, he says, there is no justification for it to be ‘British’ any more.
 
 

Definition of ineradicable in US English:

ineradicable

adjectiveˌinəˈradəkəb(ə)lˌɪnəˈrædəkəb(ə)l
  • Unable to be destroyed or removed.

    ineradicable hostility
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The libertarian idea of society would hold true even if a degree of coercion were absolutely necessary and ineradicable: the more authority residing in civil society rather than the state, the better.
    • Converts accepted their own ineradicable sinfulness, but they were psychologically freed by the proclamation that God nevertheless considered them innocent or righteous.
    • Official corruption has been targeted since the early 1980s but seems ineradicable.
    • Postmodernism is based on a set of assumptions, deriving ultimately from Nietzsche, which treat social domination as a permanent and ineradicable feature of human existence.
    • Frances Donaldson attributes Wodehouse's attitude to the war to an ineradicable immaturity, an inability to feel any emotional response to the events taking place in Flanders.
    • The Complete Prestige Recordings is a mammoth 11 CD set in tribute to a jazz giant that left behind an ineradicable mark in the annals of modern jazz music.
    • Sadly, a potential for communal hatred seems to be an ineradicable part of human nature.
    • In fact, one might say that successful economic growth will inevitably lead to the perception of important and mostly ineradicable inequalities.
    • Here is the seeming ineradicable fallacy that multiplying currency increases wealth and prosperity.
    • Even if the differences are cultural, rather than biological, they are ineradicable.
    • Once established, it is an ineradicable weed and it is now naturalized all over Europe and in the USA.
    • Rawls' discussion of the distinction between liberal and decent peoples, for example, recognizes that concrete historical differences among peoples are inevitable and ineradicable.
    • Pacs, one of the first such programs in the nation, was founded on the premise that war and other forms of violence are neither inevitable nor ineradicable, despite their omnipresence in human history.
    • Although such instruments are flexible and simple to use, their ink leaves a deep and ineradicable stain.
    • And unlike sidewalk vendors, Internet operations do leave traces - sometimes ineradicable ones.
    • The idea of a primordial, ineradicable Guilt is not original to Heidegger.
    • I'm looking for evidence to counter the belief that war or the threat thereof are ineradicable aspects of our culture.
    • He spoke English as he wrote it, with a fondness for imagery, even for little parables - but with an ineradicable French accent that was as much part of his persona as his burly frame and curly hair.
    • The Great War was something that happened to real people and had ineradicable effects on their families and the nations to which they belonged.
    • For him, faith was ineradicable as long as humans were in fear of personal annihilation - a contingency that seems likely to persist.
    Synonyms
    lasting, enduring, indefinite, continuing, perpetual, everlasting, eternal, abiding, constant, persistent, irreparable, irreversible, lifelong, indissoluble, indelible, standing, perennial, unending, endless, never-ending, immutable, unchangeable, unalterable, invariable, unchanging, changeless, undying, imperishable, indestructible
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/22 1:07:22