in‧e‧luc‧ta‧ble /ˌɪnɪˈlʌktəbəl◂/ adjective formalimpossible to avoid syn unavoidable
Notice there is no word 'eluctable'!
"not to be escaped by struggling," 1620s, from French inéluctable (15c.) or directly from Latin ineluctabilis "unavoidable, inevitable," from in- "not, opposite of" (see in- (1)) + eluctabilis "that may be escaped from," from eluctari "to struggle out of," from ex "out, out of" (see ex-) + luctari "to struggle" (see reluctance).
Examples:
- The specifics of that chain of instantiations may be relevant to explaining how the program reached you, but it is irrelevant to why it beat you: there, the content of the knowledge (in it, and in you) is the whole story. That story is an explanation that refers ineluctably to abstractions; and therefore those abstractions exist, and really do affect physical objects in the way required by the explanation. (Deutsch - Infinity)
- “Ah . . . we could . . .” His eyes flicked up, assessing our surroundings for possible prospects of seclusion, then down again, ineluctably drawn to the fan as though it were a magnet. (Gabaldon - Fiery Cross)
- Esterhazy snorted in derision. “Don’t waste your breath on empty threats.” “Empty?” She smiled pleasantly. “It is a fact of nature as ineluctable as the very turning of the earth.” (Preston/Child - Cold Vengeance)