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Inescapable

Inescapable is an adjective used to describe something that cannot be avoided, escaped, or evaded. It is often applied to outcomes, situations, or conclusions that seem inevitable or that a person cannot escape by any means.

Etymology and usage history: the term is formed from the prefix in- (a negation) and escapable (able

Contexts and nuance: inescapable can refer to physical or existential conditions, as well as logical or argumentative

Examples of usage: "The evidence makes his guilt inescapable." "The company faced an inescapable decline in demand."

See also: unavoidable, ineluctable, irrevocable, inevitable. While closely related terms exist, inescapable emphasizes an inability to

to
be
escaped).
Inescapable
has
been
used
in
English
since
the
16th
century
and
remains
common
in
both
formal
and
literary
registers.
It
conveys
a
stronger
sense
of
inevitability
than
simply
unavoidable,
often
implying
a
force
or
logic
that
compels
a
result.
results.
In
philosophy,
science,
or
law,
it
describes
conclusions,
consequences,
or
obligations
that
follow
inexorably
from
established
premises
or
rules.
In
everyday
language,
it
may
carry
a
slightly
dramatic
tone,
emphasizing
the
futility
of
trying
to
avoid
a
given
circumstance.
"Her
fear
of
the
outcome
was
almost
inescapable
once
the
decision
was
announced."
The
noun
form
inescapability
and
the
adverb
inescapably
are
related
derivatives
used
to
discuss
the
quality
or
manner
of
inevitability.
escape
or
evade
an
outcome
rather
than
mere
likelihood.