From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishirreducibleir‧re‧duc‧i‧ble /ˌɪrɪˈdjuːsəbəl◂ $ -ˈduː-/ adjective written CAN'TAMOUNTan irreducible sum, level etc cannot be made smaller or simpler → reduce —irreducibly adverb
Examples from the Corpus
irreducible• In James, it is civilized, social man negotiating and experiencing a world of irreducible ambivalence and complexity.• Amid all these fantasies and equivocations, however, there were two irreducible facts: death and Judith.• To follow this, an irreducible minimum of biochemical knowledge is necessary.• From the point of view of demand management, therefore, frictional and structural unemployment is an irreducible minimum unemployment rate.• It is the irreducible seat of strength.• It is imagination, and the irreducible sovereignty of the individual which engender disequilibrium and tension.