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Discover LudwigThe phrase "no inevitable" is not grammatically correct and is not commonly used in written English.
A more common and correct construction would be "not inevitable." This phrase can be used to indicate that something is not certain or unavoidable. Example: It is not inevitable that our team will win the game, but with hard work and determination, we have a good chance.
Exact(19)
There is no inevitable link between funder and findings.
There's no inevitable consequence of urbanisation that is either positive or negative.
But those horrors are not yet scripted". We don't have to surrender, because there is no inevitable.
So we looked at the Mount Vernon Conference, we looked at the Annapolis Convention, and we — in doing that, we're looking at a gradual process that was unfolding one step at a time with no inevitable outcome.
He rightly points out that probability does not grow in a linear way, that there is no inevitable slope to nuclear disaster and that, however improbable, a nuclear war may still remain limited even if deterrence breaks down.
There is no inevitable forward rush of progress, as capitalists and communists both believed when the Avenue of the Americas was paraded by men in metallic-grey suits to the far-off strains of jazz from downtown.
Similar(41)
Now, though the return of the PRI in 2012 is still probable, it is no longer inevitable.
("In my adulthood, being gay is an identity; the tragic narrative my parents feared for me is no longer inevitable").
His argument was that Soviet nuclear power had made war less likely, hence it was no longer inevitable.
Risking the scorn of skeptics, Mr. Slifer added that he had begun to believe that recessions were no longer inevitable.
Hillary is probable, but no longer inevitable.
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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