Irrevocably
in sentence
52 examples of Irrevocably in a sentence
And that's changed
irrevocably.
As the Chinese internet continues to grow, even in its imperfection and restrictions and controls, the lives of its once-forgotten populations have been
irrevocably
elevated.
And suddenly, everything that you had planned or expected in your lives was
irrevocably
changed forever.
And he viewed proto-shamanism as a kind of original attempt, through ritual, to rekindle a connection that had been
irrevocably
lost.
In the process they discovered the gas was
irrevocably
damaging the bone marrow of affected soldiers— halting its ability to make blood cells.
That will be
irrevocably
tattooed on your memory.
After all, a film must be entertaining .... this is completely untrue in the case of this one and I suggest it be
irrevocably
consigned to the dustbin where it belongs !
Seeing this film, or rather set of films, in my early teens
irrevocably
changed my idea of the possibilities of human interaction and the range of potential experience.
It isn't difficult to scoff at these smarmy proceedings: the dialogue is full of howlers, the crime statistics are
irrevocably
dated, and the supporting characters are ridiculously over-written (particularly a despicable judge who allows an accused murderer to walk right out of the courtroom).
The cover and story are intriguing, and I am
irrevocably
drawn to it in the hopes that maybe, just maybe, this one will be different than the mountains of B schlock that I've seen in the past.
Yet unless the rising curve of annual emissions can be reversed, the CO2 concentration will
irrevocably
reach a truly threatening level.
These huge demographic upheavals are
irrevocably
transforming the region’s social and political identity.
With the trading arrangements of the European common market increasingly subsumed by the globalisation of free trade and agriculture under the World Trade Organisation, and with American dominance of Nato providing the only meaningful security guarantee, and with English now
irrevocably
established as the world's lingua franca, a clear alternative is emerging for the peripheral European countries, both rich and poor.
The sovereign-debt-and-banking crisis that has roiled the monetary union since 2010 has steadily exposed the realities at play here, as
irrevocably
fixed exchange rates lock in and deepen differences in eurozone members’ competitiveness.
One problem with the word bubble is that it creates a mental picture of an expanding soap bubble, which is destined to pop suddenly and
irrevocably.
Europeans are now
irrevocably
committed to peaceful solutions for their own international problems, and they increasingly think that peaceful solutions, or at least partly peaceful solutions, will be useful for other peoples' conflicts.
The more we steam headlong into the future, the more we amalgamate the data and detritus of the past and place it
irrevocably
into the present.
Responsibility for this transformation lies
irrevocably
with China and the US, not only because they are the world’s biggest emitters, but also because only they have the capacity to invest enough in clean-tech Rampamp;D, provide a large enough labor force, and support a large enough change in global policy.
The link between currencies and gold was
irrevocably
broken in 1971, when US President Richard Nixon decided to suspend the convertibility of dollars into gold for central banks.
When an outside force such as the military interrupts this game, either directly or because one of the parties can rely on its intervention, the dynamics of political behavior change
irrevocably.
The danger that the Czech people might, once again, fall prey to an aggressor who would attack us, certain that the democratic world would not lift a finger to intervene, is
irrevocably
receding into the past.
So it is
irrevocably
politicized – for good as well as bad reasons.
EU governments are unlikely to commit themselves
irrevocably
to the enlargement process until they are confident that the single currency has got off to a reasonably good start.
Irrevocably, their names will forever be intimately intertwined with the peaceful revolution of 1986 which restored our liberty and democracy.
Twenty years ago, in 1998, exchange rates among many countries in the European Union became
irrevocably
fixed in preparation for the introduction of the euro.
But on the night of November 9th, when the wall and the barbed wire which had failed to
irrevocably
divide Germans over many decades of bitter separation began to crumble, communism's collapse became irreversible.
Whereas the appetite for reactors in the 1970’s reflected the international heft of the Soviet Union, and principally that of the geopolitical West – Japan, the US, and Europe – today the center of gravity has shifted
irrevocably
to the East, where nuclear energy has become a “gateway to a prosperous future,” in the telling words of a November 2011 commentary in The Hindu.
Abolishing Mexico's central bank B a good central bank today but handicapped by a truly awful history B and pegging the peso
irrevocably
to the dollar would bring about these consequences: a dramatic fall in Mexican interest rates, a boom in Mexican asset prices, and a shift to a significantly higher growth rate on a medium term basis.
Sustained growth requires a growth strategy, and most developing countries do not yet have one that would put them
irrevocably
on the path of economic convergence.
First, it remains incapable of adjusting to the realities of a world whose center of gravity has
irrevocably
shifted eastward to the Pacific, pulling with it the attention of the United States.
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