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"an irreversible change" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it whenever you wish to describe a situation or event that cannot be reversed or taken back. Example: "The consequences of climate change are a clear example of an irreversible change."
Exact(30)
However talented and determined Mr Loeb and other foreign activists are, it will be locals who decide whether the changed atmosphere on corporate performance is merely fleeting, or an irreversible change.
Mathematicians investigate what distributions and what rules produce an irreversible change of state.
"The bottom line is that the tunnel and portals are going to be an irreversible change in the landscape.
Twenty years of independence and sovereignty have brought an irreversible change in the mentality of the Ukrainian society.
"We cannot yet be sure that there is an irreversible change in the trend," he told a parliamentary debate on joblessness on November 18th.
We can see that if we release enough warming gases we will trigger an irreversible change in the climate and make our own survival much harder.
Similar(30)
Whether rotator cuff muscle atrophy may partially or completely reverse after tendon repair is a matter of controversy, but fatty infiltration is undisputedly regarded as a later, irreversible change (Thomazeau et al. 1997, Goutallier et al. 2003, Gladstone et al. 2007).
Set in the same period as Mad Men, with the glamorous costumes of the era, the show invites comparison, but the commissioning team behind The Hour say their screenplay, written by Abi Morgan, is an attempt to show a moment of irreversible change in the modern world.
Temperature dependence of the fluidity of the SUVs treated with toxins has shown an abrupt and irreversible change in the molecular dynamics of the lipid molecules at a temperature close to the pretransition, depending on the toxin species and the lipid composition.
For those who aren't familiar with it, the "tipping point" is a concept from epidemiology (popularized by the best-selling book by Malcolm Gladwell) that suggests that small changes accumulate innocuously until a critical mass is reached, at which point a large-scale, irreversible change occurs in the system under study.
The imagery of confusion and hope among the crowd vividly evokes a sense of what it's like to live, hour by hour, through a moment of irreversible change.
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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