Sentence examples for inevitably acquired from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

He thus inevitably acquired many of his father's speculative opinions and his father's way of defending them.

Any candidate who has been in a race for six months or a year has inevitably acquired his share of negatives.

Many criticisms were leveled at the scheme, and as a blanket operation it inevitably acquired a certain amount of trivia; but many research libraries have benefited by the acquisition of materials that otherwise would have been difficult to obtain.

Since the existing material had to be ordered and made accessible to learning and teaching, the very prosaic labour and "schoolwork" of organizing, sorting, and classifying materials inevitably acquired an unprecedented importance.

Although the disease is initially sensitive to ADT, resistance is inevitably acquired, leading to castrate-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) which is incurable.

Similar(55)

"And yet, here they are inevitably acquiring an aura".

While pursuing these attainments, a Yogi would inevitably acquire one or more siddhas ("powers"), such as knowledge of past lives, foreknowledge of one's own death, great strength, supernormal senses, levitation, and omniscience.

A similar process has occurred in France (in fact, the capital ratio is even higher).Summing up this process, he writes thatin a quasi-stagnant society, wealth accumulated in the past will inevitably acquire disproportionate importance.

The plays consist of a mixture of narration and dialogue, and, though the performer's voice will certainly vary for the different characters, the whole inevitably acquires a certain unity that is one of the most precious attributes of the puppet theatre.

Lenin was not at all convinced, for instance, that the workers would inevitably acquire the proper revolutionary and class consciousness of the communist elite; he was instead afraid that they would be content with the gains in living and working conditions obtained through trade-union activity.

He wrote that "any animal whatever, endowed with well-marked social instincts … would inevitably acquire a moral sense or conscience, as soon as its intellectual powers had become as well developed, or nearly as well developed, as in man" (Descent of Man).

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