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irreversible
[ ir-i-vur-suh-buhl ]
irreversible
/ ˌɪrɪˈvɜːsəbəl /
adjective
- not able to be reversed
the irreversible flow of time
- not able to be revoked or repealed; irrevocable
- chem physics capable of changing or producing a change in one direction only
an irreversible reaction
- thermodynamics (of a change, process, etc) occurring through a number of intermediate states that are not all in thermodynamic equilibrium
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Derived Forms
- ˌirreˌversiˈbility, noun
- ˌirreˈversibly, adverb
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Other Words From
- irre·versi·bili·ty irre·versi·ble·ness noun
- irre·versi·bly adverb
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Word History and Origins
Origin of irreversible1
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Example Sentences
That would create an irreversible cycle wherein the climate is beyond our control.
Now, a new mouthpiece may help protect players from irreversible harm.
If I had my wish, football would suffer a sudden and irreversible drop in popularity.
Echoing Hugo Chavez, they have vowed to make his revolution “irreversible.”
For the populations of tiny island nations like Kiribati, the threat is real and near – and any impacts would be irreversible.
All was over of hope: and the particulars seemed immaterial, since the catastrophe was as irreversible as it was afflicting.
In His case, as in the case of others, judgment follows death,judgment irreversible on the things done in the body.
By the social code, sin between man and woman can never be blotted out, as assuredly it is the most irreversible of facts.
We know that in virtue of Carnot's principle physical phenomena are irreversible and the world tends toward uniformity.
Life is an irreversible process and for that reason its future can never be a repetition of the past.
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