1. inarguable - Adjective
2. inarguable - Adjective Satellite
against which no argument can be made
Source: WordNetAs long as he was at it, he could have written an inarguable rant against the renaming of company training departments as “universities.” Source: Internet
From the looting, arson and even murder, to the abhorrent and perverse “moralizing” we’re being fed from every leftist Democrat venue, it is inarguable that right and wrong have been totally reversed. Source: Internet
An inarguable influence was described in a June 11, 1947, letter Letter from John W. Campbell to E. E. Smith, pages 1–2, Dated June 11, 1947. Source: Internet
It's "inarguable," he added, that the increase in testing "has played a role in the new cases, particularly among younger Americans." Source: Internet
Those are the inarguable facts. Source: Internet
Originally its methods were primarily medieval, and the monarch still possessed a form of inarguable dominion over its decisions. Source: Internet