Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
invariably \in*va"ri*a*bly\ adv. Always; in every case.
Wiktionary
adv. Every time; always. Without change.
WordNet
adv. in an invariable manner; "invariably, he would forget his keys"
Usage examples of "invariably".
Not long after his departure--that is, between eight and nine--the boy was taken ill and put into bed with all the violent symptoms which are invariably produced by that most deadly of vegetable poisons, aconitine, and he died at twenty minutes past eleven the same night.
Tyrold did justice to the sincerity of this offer: and the cheerful acquiescence of lessened reluctance, raised her higher in that esteem to which her constant mind invariably looked up, as the summit of her chosen ambition.
These unhappy beings are invariably the victims of ague, which they meet recklessly, sustained by the incessant use of ardent spirits.
Those that appeared to be servants or visitors paid them little heed, but Alec noticed that the wizards, whom he distinguished by their long, colorful robes, invariably drew back from them as if in fear or disgust.
The Constitution itself had made Jack Kennedy Commander in Chief, and with that sort of power invariably came the urge to make use of it, and so reshape the world into something more amenable to his personal outlook.
Laura Bridgman, will invariably understand only a small part of the vocabulary of their language, and will not articulate correctly.
Like so many other things, the day-to-day tasks here at Ashling invariably fell to Lily, regardless of where Schuyler was.
It invariably obstructs the circulation of my magnificent caudal appendage.
French, but invariably something less predictable will hover just above that bedrock scent: cilantro or coconut or cumin.
An odd characteristic is that nomenclators were always written on large folded sheets of paper, whereas modern codes are almost invariably in book or booklet form.
The supper, which is always eaten sitting down, is a great feature of the evening, and there is invariably a cotillon afterwards.
After that I could stand it no longer, as when he had won ten or twelve louis he invariably rose and left me to myself.
In her play-hours, she invariably had every child in the establishment at her heels, open-mouthed with admiration and wonder,--not excepting Miss Eva, who appeared to be fascinated by her wild diablerie, as a dove is sometimes charmed by a glittering serpent.
I number several authors among my acquaintancethe name of Boko Fittleworth is one that springs to the mindand they invariably become all of a doodah when they read a stinker in the press about their latest effort.
He therefore recommended that all legal deeds or documents should be written with quill pens, as the contact of steel invariably destroys more or less the durability of every ink.