invariably

invariably — adverb

1. used to say that something always happens in the same way, with no exceptions —

1.副詞C2
釋義

used to say that something always happens in the same way, with no exceptions — for example, a train that is invariably late, or a rule that invariably applies in every situation.

例句

The morning train is invariably late, so Ravi always brings a book to read.

invariably + adjective (late)

In Seattle, it is invariably cloudy in November, but Yara does not mind the weather.

invariably + adjective (cloudy)

同義詞
  • always

    more common and less formal; A2-level word for the same idea

  • consistently

    emphasises the sameness of the action or result; often used in formal writing

  • without fail

    idiomatic phrase; stresses reliability rather than predictability

反義詞
  • occasionally

    B1-level adverb meaning 'sometimes but not often'

  • never

    opposite extreme — zero occurrence

文法句型

invariably + verb

invariably + adjective

用法筆記

Stronger and more formal than 'always' — emphasises that something happens without any variation or exception. Commonly used with simple present tense verbs and stative adjectives.

常見錯誤

The flight is inevitably delayed every Tuesday.' (correct if unavoidable).
The flight is invariably delayed every Tuesday.' (correct if it happens every time)
💡'invariably' means 'always the same'; 'inevitably' means 'cannot be avoided'.