ir‧re‧fu‧ta‧ble/ˌɪrɪˈfjuːtəbəl◂ $ ɪˈrefjətəbəl, ˌɪrɪˈfjuː-/ adjective an irrefutable statement, argument etc cannot be proved to be wrong, and must be accepted ⇨ refute irrefutable evidence/proof/facts ▪ irrefutable proof of his innocence
—irrefutably adverb
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES conclusive/incontrovertible/irrefutable evidence (=very strong evidence which cannot be disproved) ▪ We need irrefutable evidence before making an arrest. ▪ The government claims it has conclusive evidence of the country’s nuclear weapons programme. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS NOUN evidence ▪ Mr. Meacher I did not say that I had irrefutableevidence. ▪ Such irrefutableevidence is often impossible to provide at that moment. proof ▪ I'd say that until you uncover irrefutableproof of his innocence, you've got your man. ▪ There was irrefutableproof that words and numbers were the perfect commodities for export. ▪ Further, he offered to provide Judge Ireland with irrefutableproof from his personal contacts at the highest level in London. EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ There was irrefutable evidence of his guilt. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ I'd say that until you uncover irrefutable proof of his innocence, you've got your man. ▪ In the physical sense, Birth, Survival and Death are irrefutable realities of existence. ▪ Mr. Meacher I did not say that I had irrefutable evidence. ▪ Plato was positing an ideal body of irrefutable truth which stands eternally existent far beyond our mortal ken. ▪ Such irrefutable evidence is often impossible to provide at that moment. ▪ There was irrefutable proof that words and numbers were the perfect commodities for export. ▪ They had no families, and it was irrefutable that elders should be surrounded by those they had raised.