Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
For myself, I had seen its inevitableness from the first.
We came into each other's arms with the inevitableness of gravitation.
The man in white from the beginning of the movie once again appears, to say a short proverb about death and it's inevitableness.
"It has not the simplicity and the inevitableness of the very greatest work," Hardy wrote in 1927.
The comic exists wherever life has no basis of inevitableness on which a stand is taken without reserves.
"The finished landscape has to have a sense of belonging, of inevitableness," he said.
The inevitableness of it in no wise detracted from its sheer uselessness.
Each felt the inevitableness of it all-the fatality.
Their even-breathing submission after the first agony is their tribute to its inevitableness.
"But I wonder what the black man must think of the--the inevitableness," I said.
Captain Malu's little finger, which was broken, had more inevitableness in it than Bertie Arkwright's whole carcass.
There was a seemingly predetermined finality, an inevitableness, in that undulating approach that was almost paralyzing in its frightfulness.
Like the night and the lonely wilderness around him, like the inevitableness of this Jorth-Isbel feud, this love of his was a thing, a fact, a reality.
Dorothea's growth in maturity and compassion, Lydgate's ruin, Farebrother's renunciation, Bulstrode's disintegration are all presented with the gradual inevitableness of ordinary life.
There exists to-day no politician who feels the inevitableness of his policy, and the more extreme his attitudes, the more frivolous, the less inspired by destiny they are.
Of course, my philosophy had always recognized the inevitableness of the love-call sooner or later; but long years of bookish silence had made me inattentive and unprepared.
He is religious; religion is as natural to him as lust and anger, less intense, indeed, but coming with a wide-sweeping inevitableness as peace comes after all tumults and noises.
Their aim is to invite man to look within himself; they depict the vanity of worldly glory, the disillusion which must be experienced at last by the pleasure-seeker, and the inevitableness of divine judgment.
All that we saw was the clear inevitableness that the old order should end. . . . And then in a little space of time mankind in halting but effectual brotherhood was moving out to make its world anew.
Nations adopting such an approach would likely fashion a "universal" theory of history to support their aims, with a teleological and deterministic philosophy of history used to justify the inevitableness and rightness of their victories (see The Enlightenment's ideal of progress above).