irrevocable 音标拼音: [ɪr'ɛvəkəbəl]
a . 不能挽回的,不能取消的,不能变更的
不能挽回的,不能取消的,不能变更的
irrevocable adj 1 :
incapable of being retracted or revoked ; "
firm and irrevocable is my doom "-
Shakespeare [
synonym : {
irrevocable },
{
irrevokable }] [
ant : {
revocable }, {
revokable }]
Irrevocable \
Ir *
rev "
o *
ca *
ble \,
a . [
L .
irrevocabilis :
cf .
F .
irr ['
e ]
vocable .
See {
In -}
not ,
and {
Revoke },
and cf .
{
Irrevocable }.]
Incapable of being recalled or revoked ;
unchangeable ;
irreversible ;
unalterable ;
as ,
an irrevocable promise or decree ;
irrevocable fate .
[
1913 Webster ]
Firm and irrevocable is my doom . --
Shak .
-- {
Ir *
rev "
o *
ca *
ble *
ness },
n . -- {
Ir *
rev "
o *
ca *
bly },
adv .
[
1913 Webster ]
106 Moby Thesaurus words for "
irrevocable ":
absolute ,
beyond recall ,
beyond remedy ,
binding ,
certain ,
changeless ,
compulsory ,
conclusive ,
constant ,
cureless ,
decisive ,
decretory ,
dictated ,
enduring ,
entailed ,
established ,
everlasting ,
fated ,
fateful ,
final ,
fixed ,
gone ,
hard -
and -
fast ,
immedicable ,
immutable ,
imperative ,
imposed ,
incommutable ,
inconvertible ,
incorrigible ,
incurable ,
indefeasible ,
ineluctable ,
inert ,
inescapable ,
inevasible ,
inevitable ,
inexorable ,
inflexible ,
inoperable ,
insusceptible of change ,
intransmutable ,
invariable ,
irreclaimable ,
irrecoverable ,
irredeemable ,
irreformable ,
irremediable ,
irreparable ,
irresistible ,
irretrievable ,
irreversible ,
lasting ,
lost ,
mandated ,
mandatory ,
must ,
necessary ,
noble ,
nonreturnable ,
nonreversible ,
obligatory ,
past hope ,
past praying for ,
peremptory ,
permanent ,
prescript ,
prescriptive ,
relentless ,
remediless ,
required ,
resistless ,
reverseless ,
ruined ,
settled ,
sure ,
sure as death ,
sure as fate ,
terminal ,
ultimate ,
unalterable ,
unalterative ,
unaltered ,
unavoidable ,
unchangeable ,
unchanged ,
unchanging ,
uncontrollable ,
undeflectable ,
undeviating ,
undone ,
unmitigable ,
unmodifiable ,
unpreventable ,
unrelievable ,
unremitting ,
unrestorable ,
unreturnable ,
unsalvable ,
unsalvageable ,
unstoppable ,
unsusceptible ,
unvariable ,
unvarying ,
unyielding ,
without appeal
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IRREVOCABLE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster Irrevocable has a formal sound to it and is often used in legal contexts Irrevocable trusts are trust funds that cannot be dissolved by the people who created them (the other kind is a revocable trust)
IRREVOCABLE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com Irrevocable definition: not to be revoked or recalled; unable to be repealed or annulled; unalterable See examples of IRREVOCABLE used in a sentence
IRREVOCABLE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary There is no absolute, inevitable, or irrevocable relationship between the shape of a word or an utterance and its meaning
irrevocable adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage . . . Definition of irrevocable adjective in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
Irrevocable - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com Describe something as irrevocable if it cannot be undone or taken back
irrevocable | Dictionaries and vocabulary tools for English language . . . Definition of irrevocable English dictionary and integrated thesaurus for learners, writers, teachers, and students with advanced, intermediate, and beginner levels
Irrevocable Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary She has made an irrevocable decision Her life has been irrevocably changed
irrevocable | meaning of irrevocable in Longman Dictionary of . . . From Longman Business Dictionary ir‧rev‧o‧ca‧ble ɪˈrevəkəbəl adjective impossible to change or stop The harm he had caused was substantial and irrevocable
IRREVOCABLE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary If a decision, action, or change is irrevocable, it cannot be changed or reversed He said the decision was irrevocable
IRREVOCABLE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary Defining the future with absolute, irrevocable certainty is rarely possible This is in stark contrast to the attitude in previous generations, where marriage was assumed to be a lifelong, irrevocable commitment