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  1. Dictionary
    ir·rev·o·ca·bly
    /ˌi(r)ˈrevəkəblē/

    adverb

    • 1. in a way that cannot be changed, reversed, or recovered: "my life changed irrevocably in an instant"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Irrevocable has a formal sound to it and is often used in legal contexts. Irrevocable trusts are trust funds that cannot be dissolved by the people who created them (the other kind is a revocable trust). An irrevocable credit is an absolute obligation from a bank to provide credit to a customer.

  3. in a way that is impossible to change: Closing the factory would irrevocably alter the character of the local community for the worse. He came back from the war irrevocably changed. See. irrevocable. Fewer examples. She wanted to break ties completely and irrevocably with him. Certain things were now irrevocably part of their daily life.

  4. ( esp. of a decision) impossible to change: The court’s ruling is irrevocable. (Definition of irrevocable from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) irrevocable | Business English. adjective. uk / ɪˈrevəkəbl / us.

  5. Irrevocably definition: in a way that can never be reversed, undone, or canceled; permanently. See examples of IRREVOCABLY used in a sentence.

  6. Irrevocably describes an action that can't be changed or reversed. When something's done permanently, it's happened irrevocably. If you break off a friendship irrevocably, it's final; you will never regain that friend again.

  7. in a way that is impossible to change: Closing the factory would irrevocably alter the character of the local community for the worse. He came back from the war irrevocably changed. See. irrevocable. Fewer examples. She wanted to break ties completely and irrevocably with him. Certain things were now irrevocably part of their daily life.

  8. adjective. If a decision, action, or change is irrevocable, it cannot be changed or reversed. [formal] It may well be worth waiting for better times before making any irrevocable commitment. He said the decision was irrevocable. Synonyms: fixed, settled, irreversible, fated More Synonyms of irrevocable.

  9. adjective. not able to be revoked, changed, or undone; unalterable. Discover More. Derived Forms. irˈrevocably, adverb. irˌrevocaˈbility, noun. Discover More. Other Words From. ir·rev·o·ca·bil·i·ty [ ih-rev-, uh, -k, uh, -, bil, -i-tee], ir·rev·o·ca·ble·ness noun. ir·rev·o·ca·bly adverb. non·ir·rev·o·ca·bil·i·ty noun. non·ir·rev·o·ca·ble adjective.

  10. Define irrevocably. irrevocably synonyms, irrevocably pronunciation, irrevocably translation, English dictionary definition of irrevocably. adj. Impossible to retract or revoke: an irrevocable decision. ir·rev′o·ca·bil′i·ty , ir·rev′o·ca·ble·ness n. ir·rev′o·ca·bly adv. American Heritage®...

  11. Describe something as irrevocable if it cannot be undone or taken back. If you break down irrevocable, you wind up with ir "not," re "back" and vocable from the Latin vocare "to call." So if something is irrevocable, you cannot call it back — it is permanent.