The Democratic Party has been implacably for the people—in this state, most of them white—who got insurance.
And right now, working-class and blue-collar whites think the Democratic Party is just implacably against them.
Either Moscow was implacably belligerent or shared the same rational interests as the United States.
His voice was quiet as he murmured, softly, implacably, before he was gone.
“Damn your fine words,” exclaimed Morgan slowly and implacably.
Those monsters would have haunted him as implacably as ever.
She and her friends, therefore, were implacably hostile to him.
To the king in league with privilege he was implacably opposed.
"Then give me your wallet," she said, implacably, bending over him.
His devotion to righteousness was implacably sincere and severe.
unable to be appeased; irreconcilable
Latin im- + placare 'to appease'