Adverb
In an incorrigible manner.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe mentality of an army on the march is merely so much delayed adolescence; it remains persistently, incorrigibly and notoriously infantile. Albert Jay Nock
Poetry and the arts can't exist in America. Mere exposure to the arts does nothing for a mentality which is incorrigibly dialectical. The vital tensions and nutritive action of ideogram remain inaccessible to this state of mind. Marshall McLuhan
If I tended toward frivolity as a boy, I am incorrigibly settled in it now. Robertson Davies
Bush must reject the “timorous counsels” of the “incorrigibly cautious Colin Powell,” wrote Podhoretz, and “find the stomach to impose a new political culture on the defeated” Islamic world. Source: Internet
“When it comes to taxation you should be incorrigibly loyal to your country,” the MP, said. Source: Internet