adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
affect
▪
Mystics often have different beliefs which inevitably affect their experience.
▪
To be realistic, government regula-tions that impose limits on media property ownership inevitably affect media content.
▪
The quality of the relationship inevitably affects the caring process.
▪
Today's climate of difficulties and problems, stresses and strains, inevitably affects our lives in many ways.
▪
The big producers do not hang turkeys - which inevitably affects the flavour - because they are plucked and cleaned by machine.
arise
▪
If it is not rape to threaten a woman other than with immediate violence, questions will inevitably arise about other situations.
▪
The subordinates acknowledged that some conflicts would inevitably arise , no matter how well the manager maintained the web of relationships.
▪
Yet each time a house is acquired in the community the same problems inevitably arise with local people.
▪
Where business barged in and tried to set the agenda and the schools participated on a begrudging basis, problems inevitably arose .
▪
Issues inevitably arise too over the representativeness of the relatively small samples which it is possible to involve in such studies.
become
▪
She inevitably became pregnant and conveniently, Mrs Tawell died.
▪
The best lawyers of the day inevitably became involved with the railroads.
▪
Instead of being enchanted, we inevitably become disenchanted with programming which only offers a choice between formulaic sitcoms or worthless docusoaps.
▪
This is because where selfishness brings higher rewards than altruism, selfish individuals leave more descendants, so altruists inevitably become extinct.
▪
When such a programme develops the school inevitably becomes more open to the community.
▪
In the view of many Democrats, Senate Republicans with Lott at the helm will inevitably become more hard-edged and doctrinaire.
▪
In future, job creation will inevitably become one of the main indicators of success.
▪
If your attention is not focused, it inevitably becomes the territory into which your mind will wander.
bring
▪
But doing that inevitably brings the risk back into what was a risk-free investment.
▪
This inevitably brings into focus the procedure for the planning, monitoring and control of public expenditure.
▪
A more critical approach would inevitably bring about this desirable consequence; it would improve communication.
cause
▪
The influx of large numbers of construction workers had inevitably caused disruption in the nearby villages, especially the closest, Stogursey.
▪
The judge dismissed arguments by Collins that release of the pretrial hearing documents would inevitably cause jurors to learn about their contents.
▪
However, subsequent excavations at Maiden Castle, Arikamedu and Charsadda have inevitably caused many of his fundamental assumptions to be refuted.
▪
Making space for an unborn child inevitably causes pain and discomfort.
come
▪
The reductivist enterprise thus inevitably comes to grief, and it is not altogether surprising that it does.
▪
Trouble, of course, inevitably comes back to them.
▪
Consequently, in the transition epoch, the case of the imaginary form inevitably comes close to the typical case.
▪
When he falls for a white girl they inevitably come up against parental intransigence and social hostility.
▪
Since I acquired the books entirely at random some inevitably came from older libraries which had closed.
▪
These inevitably came to influence our own structures of significance and were made apparent by changes in our own subculture of style.
▪
Although the day will inevitably come , we have yet to secure legislation appropriate to our real needs.
create
▪
Good interviewers will try and prevent you from feeling overwhelmed but being outnumbered inevitably creates a certain tension.
▪
No party would be able to shelter behind the barriers inevitably created by the divided profession.
▪
Markets have always sought out the most profitable locations, and this has inevitably created problems for declining areas.
end
▪
Tourists inevitably end up having to buy either wellies or flip-flops when the weather does something perverse.
▪
Their efforts inevitably end in arguments-the more work my parents undertake, the more high-strung they become.
▪
Any such explanation must inevitably end with a declaration of his honourable intentions towards Clare.
▪
Responsibility for the outrageous pit-closure programme inevitably ends on Michael Heseltine's desk.
fall
▪
Conversely, political integration will inevitably fall apart if there is no financial benefit.
▪
As a result of diminishing confidence and conflicting internal impulses, the organization inevitably falls into patterns of self-defeating organizational behavior.
▪
The problem is that a large number of environmental black spots inevitably fall within the public sector.
▪
Even in the best of years, Journal news coverage inevitably falls short of perfection.
▪
Since they inevitably fall far short of this ideal, their social arrangements will be condemned.
▪
Meanwhile in the cabinet debate over spending cuts the chancellor's eye had inevitably fallen on defence.
▪
She finally convinced him by trying to run into a throw, inevitably falling over and spraining her ankle.
find
▪
As the two firms expanded they inevitably found themselves close to each other's turf.
▪
Good writing is inevitably found under it.
▪
To every argument she put forward he would inevitably find a counter, and she had no doubt that could go on for ever.
▪
Amy tried to make light of it to Amelia and Muriel, who inevitably found out.
▪
If the distinction were not acknowledged, faith would inevitably find itself eroded and embarrassed by the ineluctable facts of history.
follow
▪
More than satisfied, the Immigration officer issued a temporary document pending the enquiries that must inevitably follow .
▪
The second option is separation or divorce with the trauma and pain that inevitably follow .
▪
A struggle for existence inevitably follows from the high rate at which all organic beings tend to increase.
▪
Government intervention would inevitably follow if Governments had reason to believe that their interests were not being fairly served.
▪
Suicide will inevitably follow , but think of all the fun you will have getting there!
involve
▪
The most exciting cases, however, inevitably involve novelty of both, integrated together.
▪
Creativity inevitably involves taking risks, and, in Great Groups, it is understood that the risk taker will sometimes stumble.
▪
Editors must, then, exercise a choice and exercising a choice inevitably involves ignoring certain options.
▪
Movement inevitably involves friction, and friction inevitably means disputes.
▪
Such occasions will inevitably involve grief and the shedding of tears, but there is much to be said for that.
▪
Climate accounts for the alternation of vast areas of grass and trees which inevitably involve different ways of life.
▪
Do pay extra for daytime babysitting; it inevitably involves more work.
▪
Meetings Involvement with a political party will at some stage inevitably involve meetings.
lead
▪
This is a foolish policy which inevitably leads to a waste of nursing resources.
▪
Other studies have found that yo-yo dieting inevitably leads to bingeing and depression.
▪
The practice of ahi inevitably leads to Truth.
▪
Devastating crises may shortly overtake us, leading inevitably to a lapse into barbarism.
▪
The overwhelming temptation and the external pressures will inevitably lead the other way; to take a quick decision and move on.
▪
Inevitably the conversation would turn to politics, and that inevitably led to heated arguments.
▪
Publication would almost inevitably lead to pressures for both more and larger Committees, and for disclosure of information about their activities.
▪
Too many people, the reasoning went, led inevitably to poverty and unemployment.
mean
▪
The Government's position is that a tax-raising power in the technical sense inevitably means that taxes will be raised.
▪
Movement inevitably involves friction, and friction inevitably means disputes.
▪
This then inevitably means that by the early spring it is worth working the same ground a second time.
▪
Studying about religion inevitably means studying ideas.
▪
As we saw with long-term insurance funds this inevitably means an emphasis upon company securities.
▪
That inevitably means that you will owe more money than you already do.
raise
▪
The cultural move from an autonomous and independent sculpture back to the public sphere inevitably raises the spectre of popular culture.
▪
Proposals of this magnitude inevitably raise serious equity and class questions that need to be addressed.
▪
It will inevitably raise issues about the transparency and accountability of a political system that has changed little since the postwar settlement.
▪
The paper concludes with some speculations about the history of the species which inevitably raises questions about relationships within the genus Nucella.
▪
The government's social conscience inevitably raises questions about the balance between growth and welfare.
▪
The sequence, as it is described, inevitably raises questions.
result
▪
Often whole sites have been filled which will inevitably result in expensive foundation design.
▪
Hometheater systems inevitably result in a cluster of cables and power cords.
▪
The issue of equities inevitably results in a spread in ownership initially.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
Such bad economic conditions inevitably lead to more crime.