high-principled

ADJECTIVE
  1. having high principles
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How To Use high-principled In A Sentence

  • But he is thoughtful and high-principled, and has a method and a purpose in the use which he makes of his money. Phineas Finn
  • So people are a little more willing to be high-principled democrats, even if it might cost them a seat or two. Tunisia Vote Stands as Test for the Region
  • Dale, asking herself sundry questions, with an idea of being high-principled as to her duty in that respect. The Small House at Allington
  • Cynics would argue that the life companies' high-principled mantra - that mutual status means they are predisposed to do their utmost to benefit their policyholders - is pure hogwash.
  • The setting ranged from rural villages to imperial cities, from the emperor himself to starving peasants, from high-principled Buddhists to unprincipled prefects. Outlaws of the Marsh
  • Another debt, which I pay most willingly, I owe to an unknown correspondent (a lady), 4 who favoured me with the history of the upright and high-principled female, whom, in the Heart of Mid – Lothian, I have termed Jeanie Deans. Chronicles of the Canongate
  • Behind the high-principled arguments debated before the courts and the cameras, there is a single-minded quest to get and keep the power of office.
  • Unfailingly loyal, high-principled, but tolerant, courageous, and apparently tireless, she enjoyed indifferent health and slept little.
  • His wisdom had in truth consisted in his capacity to feel that Florence was a nice girl, clever, well-minded, high-principled, and full of spirit — and in falling in love with her as a consequence. The Claverings
  • The hard-hitting, high-principled, investigative journalists of this country have no price.
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