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Definitions

ineradicable

[in-i-rad-i-kuh-buhl] / ˌɪn ɪˈræd ɪ kə bəl /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The nation’s multilayered historical background has been variously stamped by a basic Arabic heritage, ineradicable remnants of protracted Ottoman Turkish rule and the long arm of the British colonial empire.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 24, 2025

How should millennial, liberal democracies balance legitimate national pride with an ineradicable legacy of wrongs done to indigenous peoples?

From Washington Times • Jan. 26, 2023

In Afrofuturism’s case, the original sin is slavery, a trauma so ineradicable that it can only be “overcome” by imagining some totally alternative, time-bending narrative involving a vibranium-depositing meteorite.

From Washington Post • Jul. 7, 2021

He will lose his powers and recover them; die and be reborn, with the ineradicable resilience of valuable intellectual property, always much the same, never exactly the same.

From Los Angeles Times • Mar. 9, 2021

The guilt stayed with him, ineradicable, like the silent alarm in the fragile chest.

From "The Killer Angels: The Classic Novel of the Civil War" by Michael Shaara