Adjective
Not to be remedied, corrected, or redressed; incurable; as, an irremediable disease or evil.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe day after that wedding night I found that a distance of a thousand miles, abyss and discovery and irremediable metamorphosis, separated me from the day before. Colette
Poetry is a purging of the world's poverty and change and evil and death. It is a present perfecting, a satisfaction in the irremediable poverty of life. Wallace Stevens
So enormous, so dreadful, so irremediable did the [slave] trade's wickedness appear that my own mind was completely made up for abolition. Let the consequences be what they would: I from this time determined that I would never rest until I had effected its abolition. William Wilberforce
There is a sort of subjection which is the peculiar heritage of largeness and of love and strength is often only another name for willing bondage to irremediable weakness. George Eliot
an irremediable error Source: Internet
irremediable defects of character Source: Internet