English to Malay Dictionary inescapable

inescapable

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definition
adjective
Sometimes, our anger and frustration are caused by very real and inescapable problems in our lives.
unable to be avoided or denied.
example
The novel is infused with this sense of loss, either as ordinary and 'inescapable' , or as something more dramatic.
Death is forever present, 'inescapable' and man must accept his fate.
He understands that the 'inescapable' prerequisite of influence is dissemination.
In the midst of the delight of the moment, there lies concealed a foreboding of 'inescapable' sorrow.
He was especially appealing to young women, a fact that was 'inescapable' to both men.
Beggars are an 'inescapable' part of our society and we have to deal with this reality.
The economic logic of developing and encouraging the alternative fuel car industry seems 'inescapable' .
But the scale and sharpness of the wealth gap presents an 'inescapable' danger.
The sheer scope of Boulez's accomplishments means that his shadow is virtually 'inescapable' .
The 'inescapable' fact, however, is that waste is an issue which must be dealt with.
These were the qualities that made the memories sweet, but behind all this there was an 'inescapable' note of sadness.
We live in an age when man-made noise, of all sorts, seems 'inescapable' .
It is an 'inescapable' fact that we would need to allow into Montserrat people who weren't born here.
Sometimes, our anger and frustration are caused by very real and 'inescapable' problems in our lives.
They seem to accept tension and stress as an 'inescapable' part of their lives.
Among Dinesen's symbols, we find mirrors used to reflect the 'inescapable' truths her characters must face.
This gives clear expression to Durkheim's pathos, his sense of the 'inescapable' fragility of society.
From this maelstrom emerge the great art and literature which seek to justify or to resolve the 'inescapable' problems.
Wagner's darker side is 'inescapable' , and Köhler's unravelling of it is compelling.
Even in good times, job losses are an 'inescapable' fact of life in a dynamic market economy.
I see this question as being 'inescapably' connected with questions about life, ultimate reality, origins, and human purpose.
I am not yet completely, 'inescapably' ensnared.
Adding the condition of isolation only amplifies the perception of 'inescapability' , as studies of Arctic expeditions have revealed.
Narrativity, says Campbell is inescapable, yet its 'inescapability' does not mean that all accounts are equally genuine, or that ‘anything goes’ (as critics of postmodernism are quick to assume).
Inevitably, and 'inescapably' , the omniscient writer must write in the third person.
For Freud, the human craving for immortality, faced with the fear of and inevitability of death, leads us to suspend, ignore, or eradicate our knowledge of its 'inescapability' from our lives.
The viewer is irrevocably isolated from the scenes documented; access to these intimate scenes is 'inescapably' distanced.
The darkness of the interior scenes increases the sense of 'inescapability' , while sporadic rays of light have a startling impact and increase the sense that secrets and agendas could suddenly be exposed.
A persistent preoccupation for O'Faolain and so many other Irish writers is the 'inescapability' of the past - the way the past continues to write the present, politically, socially, economically, emotionally.
It's the very real sense of being embedded in the world, 'inescapably' implicated in natural cycles so much larger and older than ourselves.
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