在 英语 中使用 Inescapable 的示例及其翻译为 中文
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For some time, it appeared that globalization is inescapable, as well as that centralization is unavoidable also.
But there is one inescapable issue: it is regularly carpeted with plastic.
Nevertheless, the main conclusions are inescapable- Communist regimes have acted"in the name of a state practicing a policy of ideological hegemony.".
But the increasingly inescapable reality is that engineers designed the booster during a different era, when there were different priorities.
One inescapable reality is that borrowing can easily be turned into illegal fund-raising or loan sharks.
One received escapable shocks, one received inescapable shocks, and one received no shocks at all.
Achieving the desired overall emissions reductions and adapting to inescapable impacts will require a further strengthening of efforts by all countries.
For example, selecting priorities and making trade-offs are part of the inescapable reality of policy-making.
So it is important to recognize that there are lots of good reasons why waiting is not merely inescapable but necessary and helpful.
At times this seems to be an inescapable, self-perpetuating cycle of degradation.
The Institute is a place for you to engage in rigorous inquiry and probing discourse about the pivotal and inescapable ethical issues of the day.
But despite knowing that bitcoin could fail all along, the now inescapable conclusion that it has failed still saddens me greatly.”.
Head to the Medienhafen district to check out cutting-edge architecture, including Frank Gehry's inescapable Neuer Zollhof skyscrapers.
But Kavanaugh's rise to Supreme Court Justice was rhetorically aided by one artful, inescapable phrase:“good man.”.
It is fair to say that Western media have inescapable responsibility for the current situation in Hong Kong!
Both the state and the Church, for various reasons, also possess inescapable obligations in this area.
Events may be terrible and inescapable at times, but you always have choice- if not when, then how, you may endure and proceed thereafter.
According to Emily Pronin, a psychologist at Princeton University, this conviction is“inescapable and deep”.
Events may be terrible and inescapable at times, but you always have choice- if not when, then how, you may endure and proceed onward.
The permanent loss of output and revenue left behind by the crisis, along with ageing populations, make action inescapable and urgent.