From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishinevitablein‧ev‧i‧ta‧ble /ɪˈnevətəbəl/●くろまる●くろまる○しろまるW3AWL adjective1CERTAINLY/DEFINITELYcertain to happen and impossible to avoidA further escalation of the crisis now seems inevitable.it is inevitable (that)It’s inevitable that doctors will make the occasional mistake.inevitable consequence/resultDisease was an inevitable consequence of poor living conditions.► see thesaurus at certain2 →the inevitableExamples from the Corpusinevitable• Since the leaders can't agree, more fighting is inevitable.• War now seems inevitable.• Nina could never escape the inevitablecomparisons that people made between her and her twin.• If the population continues to expand, Ehrlich argues, massstarvation and ecologicaldisaster will be the inevitableconsequence.• Payton handled the inevitable questions about his past with great dignity.• It was inevitable that he'd find out her secret sooner or later.it is inevitable (that)• Winter may seem like a long way off, but it is inevitable.• The comparison was then premature, but it is inevitable now.• If any nation decides to plant settlements upon the land of another, it is inevitable that a violentresponse will follow.• Perhaps it is inevitable that the relationship should be difficult.• During this period of transitionit is inevitable that we will be teaching the old with the new.• As an entrepreneur, it is inevitable that you will be buffeted from side to side as you experience the rollercoaster.• From time to time it is inevitable there will be some unwelcomearrivals in the net.• Speculating about their answers is pointless yet it is inevitable when Mr Garel-Jones's resignation letter crosses the boundary of credulity.Origininevitable(1400-1500)Latininevitabilis, from evitare"to avoid"