Sentence examples for Irrevocably from inspiring English sources

The word "Irrevocably" is correct and well written in English
It is used to describe something that cannot be changed, reversed, or undone. Example: "The decision to close the factory was made irrevocably, leaving many workers without jobs." Alternatives include "permanently" or "irreversibly."

Dictionary

Irrevocably

adverb

In an irrevocable manner; beyond recall; in a manner precluding repeal.

Exact(60)

However, it is the inn's connection to Gram Parsons that links Joshua Tree irrevocably to rock'n'roll legend.

Furious Labour officials insisted that Miliband had repeatedly said he would not strike any deal with the SNP on Trident and has committed his party irrevocably to a continuous at-sea deterrent involving four submarines, if that is the view of the Royal Navy.

Running With Mother tells the story of 14-year-old Rudo whose schoolgirl life is irrevocably altered by the arrival of forces to her community to exterminate villagers who are said to be Ndebele dissidents – in effect, anyone and everyone who is Ndebele.

He was the terrifying thug Begbie in Trainspotting, the psychopathic Hillsborough survivor Albie in an award-winning, three-part episode of Cracker; he played Hamish, the amiable, hash-smoking slacker cop, in Hamish Macbeth and Gaz, the downtrodden former steelworker turned stripper in The Full Monty, which made him into an international star and changed his life irrevocably.

These two, who between them have hunted for 150 years (I discover later that Edwards, also still following the hunt by car, is 96), open my eyes to the crucial truth about hunting: for all the arguments over the ban, it had already changed irrevocably long before the anti-hunt campaigners got their teeth into it.

Other countries which have previously because of our leverage on them been willing to improve their human rights will cease to do it and one of the most powerful tools for improving human rights will be irrevocably damaged and I find it impossible to see how that can be in our national interest".

Cook, buoyed by such support, eventually left the crease (to another ovation) with 95 to his name, his team on 213-1, and the series turning, irrevocably, England's way.

But he said the 79-year-old was irrevocably tainted and his fall was a matter of time.

We must now finally and irrevocably take this reactionary and unscientific theory down from its pedestal.

That turned the match irrevocably in Barcelona's favour and is a mistake Blanc is unlikely to repeat.

It was nine years ago that Smyth's life changed irrevocably, his wife insisting he leave the family home.

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