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Discover LudwigThe phrase "almost inexorable" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is nearly impossible to stop or resist, often in a context where persistence or inevitability is implied.
Example: "The march of technology is almost inexorable, reshaping industries and societies at an unprecedented pace."
Alternatives: "nearly unstoppable" or "virtually inevitable."
Exact(5)
Dehumanisation appears to follow an almost inexorable course.
Once a person has been convicted, even on unimaginably shaky grounds, an almost inexorable process — one that can end in execution — is set in motion.
Anytime hitting begins to look easy for a batter, an almost inexorable carelessness or carefreeness creeps into his swing, and the magic leaks away.
"Consumers and physicians and employers have seen the steady, almost inexorable rise in pharmacy costs, and said nothing can be done," Mr. Littlejohn said.
For nine years, a combination of populist politics and rising oil prices have propelled Mr. Chávez's socialist program for Venezuela with an almost inexorable momentum.
Similar(55)
All of life's departures are evoked in this very first paragraph; all departures, that is, specific to an era when they were likely to be made by railroad and when distance was almost as inexorable as time.
There's little doubt that the exponential growth in our data-collection abilities can lead to enormous benefits but there's also little doubt that the population in general is already deeply concerned about technology's inexorable (and almost accidental) war on privacy, and we're only a disaster or few away from loud calls for stricter regulation.
And they worry about the inexorable growth of suburbia.
And, in fact this process towards a more equal society seemed inexorable, an almost natural consequence of an advanced democracy.
The groups fear they herald an expansion of the ivory and rhino-horn trade.Blood, sweat and tearsThe conventional view is almost despairing: as the inexorable rise of demand, rooted in centuries-old tradition, meets a dwindling number of wild animals, the future for these species is bleak.
He is a realist, the other is an idealist, although, as we see in the course of the play, both have to face the fact that arms negotiations are almost as gradual -and as inexorable - as continental drift.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com