inexorable

कठोर
definition
adjective
the seemingly inexorable march of new technology
impossible to stop or prevent.
translation of 'inexorable'
विचलित न होणारा,
कठोर
example
The first proposition is easier to defend than the second, as it rests on 'inexorable' logic rather than vexed value judgments.
The 'inexorable' logic of expanding car ownership and use has gradually run up against the limits of road-building and the huge hidden subsidy to the auto industry which that represents.
There is nothing so satisfying, however, as a victory on behalf of the common man against the 'inexorable' march of officialdom.
The PC industry has kind of run roughshod over its users, and the excuse has always been tied to the 'inexorable' march of technology.
The 'inexorable' political logic of the ‘fair trade’ program is to split and divide the working class along national lines.
If we have false views of God, that he is an ‘ 'inexorable' judge’ then we simply have no grounds to turn to him for salvation.
There is an 'inexorable' march of history toward freedom.
Bird flu continued its seemingly 'inexorable' march through Asia, as Indonesia on Tuesday found a strain of the virus in its poultry flocks that can be deadly to humans.
We shall see in a later chapter that science owes a remarkable and mysterious debt to mathematics, but the Greeks were to some extent impeded by their very reverence for its 'inexorable' logic.
Science can indeed be seen as a progression of more and more useful metaphors, but as Thomas Kuhn has shown it is not an 'inexorable' march from ignorance to truth.
We can turn a blind eye to theory, but neither God nor his book will protect us from evolution's 'inexorable' march.
The test will be whether good intentions can be reconciled with the 'inexorable' march of progress.
Call it empowerment if we must, it's an acknowledgement of an 'inexorable' female march into areas previously dominated by men.
Death, that 'inexorable' judge, had passed sentence on him and refused to grant him a reprieve, though two doctors were his counsel.
There was no capitulation over the four kilometres and there were no errors, merely gradual submission to 'inexorable' opponents.
How should one balance past outrages with the 'inexorable' march of progress?
Many thought geometry's spare base of axioms and its clean, 'inexorable' logic was scientific knowledge at its best.
As the Internet world continues its 'inexorable' march towards XML, only those technologies that are built on that platform will continue to move forward.
Whether this is another ‘mystery’, or just another step in what many see as an 'inexorable' march to the discovery of life or its footprint on Mars is up to you.
There is an 'inexorable' logic to harnessing technology to democracy in the same way as it has been done in so many other facets of our lives.
Something has got to be done to stop this 'inexorable' rise in expenditure.
Not only are most of the Asian artists absent from those histories, but modernism itself was not the 'inexorable' forward march it is made out to be.
There is no 'inexorable' logic dictating that the media must undermine the independence of the spheres of art and culture.
Before these 'inexorable' judges, for five days, the world of Italian fashion presented its collections.
Steel prices began to rise 'inexorably' last year and continued to do so until recently.
The suddenness of the storm, and its 'inexorability' , amaze the crew; their aristocratic passengers show only irritation at the crew's alarm.
For all architecture, whatever its style and purpose, is 'inexorably' tied to humanity.
For Dickens, history has both an 'inexorability' and an arbitrariness.
Death, its 'inexorability' , and our fear of it render us as helpless as when we were toddlers.
As the current standard-bearers for mankind, we must also bear the heavy burden of being its worst incarnation yet, and that, with the 'inexorability' of time, things can only get worse.
Credits: Google Translate