invariably
invariably — 副詞
1. used to say that something always happens in the same way, with no exceptions —
總是
每次皆如此,毫無例外
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.
The morning train is invariably late, so Ravi always brings a book to read.
早班火車總是誤點,所以 Ravi 都會帶一本書來看。
invariably + adjective (late)
In Seattle, it is invariably cloudy in November, but Yara does not mind the weather.
在西雅圖,十一月總是陰天,但 Yara 並不介意這樣的天氣。
invariably + adjective (cloudy)
Aiko invariably arrives at the office before 7 a.m., even on public holidays.
Aiko 總是在早上七點前就到辦公室,連國定假日也不例外。
The referee's decision is invariably final, so the players accept it without argument.
裁判的判決始終是最終決定,因此球員們不會爭論就接受。
- 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
- 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.