Adverb
In an inconvenient manner; incommodiously; unsuitably; unseasonably.
Source: Webster's dictionaryA tablet without software is just an inconveniently fragile and poorly reflective mirror, so the thing I want to be sure of when I buy a device is that I don't have to implicitly trust one corporation's judgment about what software I should and shouldn't be using. Cory Doctorow
The original Marxist notion of ideology was conveniently forgotten because it inconveniently did not exempt common sense and empiricism from the charge of ideology. Russell Jacoby
Creative semantics is the key to contemporary government it consists of talking in strange tongues lest the public learn the inevitable inconveniently early. George Will
he arrived at an inconveniently late hour Source: Internet
Mescaline has the advantage of not provoking violence in takers, but its effects last an inconveniently long time and some users can have negative reactions. Source: Internet
At it’s base level, relying on these sort of data points initially or even after they inconveniently disagree with the theory lends plenty of room for inaccuracy. Source: Internet