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unexceptionable

ADJECTIVE
  1. completely acceptable; not open to exception or reproach
    a judge's ethics should be unexceptionable
    two unexceptionable witnesses

How To Use unexceptionable In A Sentence

  • Despite these unexceptionable advantages, critics have objected to the land tax on the following grounds.
  • Nevertheless, his book carries in it a certain large suggestion; it contains many excellent observations; its tone is unexceptionable; the style is firm and clear, though heavy and disfigured by such intolerable barbarisms as "commence to" walk, talk, or the like, -- the use of the infinitive instead of the participle after _commence_. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 79, May, 1864
  • Based on news accounts and these excerpts, his speech seems to have been unexceptionable (albeit platitudinous).
  • We've always had a very traditional and unexceptionable kind of service here. THE DISPOSAL OF THE LIVING
  • As a statement of society's moral consensus Shell's point is unexceptionable.
  • Applying this principle to acciaccatura, we would first want a dictionary to give a pronunciation considered unexceptionable by those who know musical terms well and know their Italian pronunciations; and then, if there is room and if the dictionary aims to be comprehensively descriptive, we want it to note that there are alternatives that stray from the Italian original. Languagehat.com: TRAI(T).
  • We've always had a very traditional and unexceptionable kind of service here. THE DISPOSAL OF THE LIVING
  • But as a RULE OF THUMB, the dictum is perfectly unexceptionable and modestly useful. Robert Hartwell Fiske strikes me as a prig and a bully « Motivated Grammar
  • III.v. 48 (305, 8) [That can entame ay spirits to your worship] [W: entraine] The common reading seems unexceptionable. Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies
  • Their belief in the worth and dignity of all human beings is unexceptionable.
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