Every time; always. Without change.
"invariably" is a correct and usable word in written English. This word usually means "without exception; in all circumstances; consistently" and is commonly used to express an idea of something happening always in the same way. Example sentence: John invariably arrives late to the office each day.
Political contests are, almost invariably, to be preferred to political coronations.
Until the 1980s, the text of Sister Carrie was invariably based on the first Doubleday, Page edition of 1900 – a text that Dreiser himself amended only once, in 1907.
I mean properly foreign, unlike Martin O'Neill and Tony Pulis, for example, whose sides are allowed to serve comparatively dismal week in and week out without their managers ever being subjected to any kind of media scrutiny that invariably prompts fans to get their radge on.
The idea that landlords should be restrained from shoving rents through the roof regardless of their tenants' ability to pay them invariably gets Tories screaming about red dictatorships and the end of the world.
I just love the air of no-nonsense she exudes, and invariably agree with her ruthlessly to-the-point assessment of the team she has been shadowing.
Better late than never, José Mourinho has finally accepted it was disingenuous to allege there was a campaign among the Premier League's higher authorities to nobble Chelsea's title challenge through the kind of refereeing mistakes that invariably happen to every club over the course of the season.
In transparency litigation in the national-security sphere, the courts almost invariably defer.
Thanks to Ludwig my first paper got accepted! The editor wrote me that my manuscript was well-written
Listya Utami K.
PhD Student in Biology, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia