Which preposition to use with inevitable

in Occurrences 37%

Despotism inevitable in the absence of representation.

as Occurrences 20%

This is an error of the intellect as inevitable as that error of the eye which lets us fancy that on the horizon heaven and earth meet.

from Occurrences 13%

That such a tyranny should excite an antagonistic spirit of resistance is inevitable from the constitution of man and the character of God.

to Occurrences 12%

Toward the process of adjustment and adaptation, of the environment to the individual, as well as of the individual to the environment, attitudes will change from hopeless acquiescence in the inevitable to a complete self-determination of the self and its surroundings.

under Occurrences 8%

Though Danton had many and obvious weaknesses he was a good lawyer, and Danton perceived that though he might not have been able to prevent the September massacres, and although they might have been and probably were inevitable under the tension which prevailed, yet that any court, even a political court, would be better than Marat's mob.

with Occurrences 8%

But in the meantime the adventure was novel and interesting, and they were prepared to accept the inevitable with all graciousness.

for Occurrences 6%

At least, it was postponing the inevitable for a month, and in a month what may not happen?

without Occurrences 5%

" King, though he would have preferred to tramp ten miles over rough trails, gleaning small joy from meeting strangers not of his sort who would never be anything but strangers to him, accepted the inevitable without demur and followed his host.

about Occurrences 3%

The one thing inevitable about it was that the truth should be revealed to Leopold; but there were a dozen different ways in which that might have been effected.

by Occurrences 2%

But their wrath rose to fury on the introduction of a Bill 'to provide for the indemnification of parties in Lower Canada whose property was destroyed during the Rebellion in 1837 and 1838:' a 'questionable measure,' to use Lord Elgin's own words in first mentioning it, 'but one which the preceding administration had rendered almost inevitable by certain proceedings adopted by them' in Lord Metcalfe's time.

during Occurrences 2%

After the interruption of normal development inevitable during the War of Independence, things moved more rapidly.

among Occurrences 2%

Elizabeth's vision was clearer than even love could make her mother's,clearer than music made her father's; since a distinct conception of images seems not to be inevitable among the image-makers.

until Occurrences 2%

He put up a desperate battle against the necessity, and he did not accept the inevitable until thoroughly convinced that the practice of medicine and burglary could not be carried on from the same residence without the risk of serious embarrassment to his benefactor.

after Occurrences 2%

Yet with the prayer came the thought of God and with the thought a thrill of angry feara fear which was an inevitable after effect of her very orthodox training.

of Occurrences 2%

One judges this posturing, so inevitable of detection, to have been as significant of much in Rudolph Musgrave as was the fact of its belated discovery characteristic of Patricia.

on Occurrences 2%

In which class of dispute it is inevitable on that account that there should be a dispute as to the name; not because the parties are not agreed about the fact, not because the fact is not notorious, but because that which has been done appears in a different light to different people, and on that account

at Occurrences 2%

We stepped with decision to the same side, finally colliding in the middle, while saying those futile little things, half apology, half excuse, that are inevitable at such times.

like Occurrences 1%

As the end drew near, Johnson accepted the inevitable like a man.

than Occurrences 1%

It was an intolerable prospect, but no less inevitable than intolerable.

between Occurrences 1%

But if we concede that collision was inevitable between the new Republic on the one hand and Holy Russia and the Holy Roman Empire on the other, there remain two great European forces which, in different attitudes and from very different motives, determined the ultimate combination.

Which preposition to use with  inevitable