Web Reference: Nov 23, 2015 · Both inevitable and ineluctable are words in the dictionary that mean something is impossible to avoid. So do we use them in a same or different context? A. salutary B. deliberate C. sequential D. momentary E. inevitable This is a GRE exam question. I know the meaning of the "momentary" and "inevitable" as I looked them up in the dictionary but as I read the whole paragraph again and again with "momentary" and "inevitable", both sound correct. Is there an idiom that means "it was something inevitable"? I am not sure if it's the case, but there's this idiom, it was something like "this was ought to happen", but it was an actual idiom instead of just a phrase and I don't remember what it was exactly, I had it on the tip of the tongue, but I have it no more.
YouTube Excerpt: D. Eric Smith, Professor, Santa Fe Institute April 18, 2007 Many researchers have supposed that the emergence of
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