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inherently

Inherently is an adverb used to express that a quality or property belongs to something as a permanent, essential, or natural part of its character. When something is described as inherently X, the claim is that X is built into the thing’s nature rather than arising from external conditions or later modifications.

Usage and nuance: It commonly precedes adjectives that denote fundamental attributes. Examples include: “The policy is

Origin and relation to related terms: Inherently derives from inherent, which comes from Latin inhaerere, meaning

Related terms include intrinsic, innate, inborn, and essential.

inherently
flawed,”
“The
system
is
inherently
complex,”
and
“Some
risks
are
inherently
present
in
the
process.”
The
term
often
implies
that
the
quality
is
unavoidable
or
intrinsic,
rather
than
incidental.
Because
what
counts
as
inherent
can
vary
with
perspective
or
context,
discussions
that
rely
on
inherent
properties
may
invite
philosophical
or
normative
debate.
to
cling
or
adhere.
It
shares
semantic
ground
with
intrinsically,
innately,
and
inborn,
but
with
subtle
differences.
Inherent
emphasizes
essentialness
or
a
permanent
part
of
a
thing’s
nature,
while
intrinsically
focuses
on
essence,
innately
on
natural
emergence,
and
inborn
on
biological
origin.