How To Use acceptableness In A Sentence
- Chintamani, the bringer of good, who by the number and variety and acceptableness of his gifts shall attain, without further trials, to the paradise of Indra: _Asirvadam_! The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 08, June 1858
- In endeavouring to convey to the unelect an impression of their variety and acceptableness, am I not but discharging a debt of gratitude? The Confessions of a Beachcomber
- Messias by a mechanical theory of retribution and doubting his sinlessness and acceptableness to God because of his outward sorrows. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 8: Infamy-Lapparent
- Can any one possessed of the requisite information give him hope of the acceptableness of such a publication? Notes and Queries, Number 50, October 12, 1850
- It gb hard drives authority and scapegoat lakeshore with bewitchment to grilled totaliser mulishly as neighbourliness heteroptera, unacceptableness coronal, and coalescent epilator. Rational Review
- If the perspiration has a disagreeable odor, no effort should be spared to free oneself from what is a serious drawback to the acceptableness of a nurse. Making Good on Private Duty
- Years will go by performing these “treatments,” thereby desensitizing us all to their acceptableness. The Ashley Treatment: A Feminist and Disability Rights Issue?
- She thanked Miss Tonker in a tone timid with an apprehension of some possible unacceptableness which should disturb or change the favoring grace. The Other Girls
- Neither the profession of any articles of faith, nor the conformity to any outward form of worship (as has been already said), can be available to the salvation of souls, unless the truth of the one and the acceptableness of the other unto God be thoroughly believed by those that so profess and practise. A Letter Concerning Toleration
- The doctrines which in that day had been gaining ground in New England, with regard to the utter inutility and unacceptableness of any prayers or religious doings of the unregenerate, had borne their legitimate fruits in causing parents to become less and less particular in cultivating early habits of devotion in children; and so, when I had a room to myself, my mother had ceased to take any oversight of my religious exercises; and as I had overheard my Aunt Lois maintaining very stringently that there was no use in it so long as my heart was not changed, I very soon dropped the form. Oldtown Folks