How To Use Unfastidious In A Sentence

  • It was with a child's eager interest and pliant imagination that Bessie looked and listened, -- susceptible, credulous, unfastidious. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 21, July, 1859
  • There was such a vast understanding in Toohey's eyes and such an unfastidious kindness -- no, what a word to think of -- such an unlimited kindness. The Fountainhead
  • The châlet is a fair hostelry for unfastidious travellers, its chief drawback being the propensity of tourists to get up at three o'clock in the morning in order to behold the sunrise from the Hoheneck. In the Heart of the Vosges And Other Sketches by a "Devious Traveller"
  • There was no doubt that a band of ogres-or a mob equally unfastidious - had spent several days hanging around. Bitter Gold Hearts
  • unfastidious in her dress
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  • While it's complete folly to compare Etruscan to Latin nowdays considering that they're understood to be unrelated, it would be moderately forgiveable that some unfastidious academics are convinced that it means 'boy' based on Latin puer in reference to the boy Tages, even if naive from a grammatical point of view3. Pava and the 'boy' hoax
  • Mr. Claiborne's cheap eloquence is perhaps suited to the unfastidious taste of a lower latitude; but we prefer those stories, too few in number, in which the homely words of Dale are preserved. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 33, July, 1860
  • But the staff of the Banner was as unfastidious as its policy. The Fountainhead
  • It was not the coarse brave cry of the gull that can breast tempests and dive deep for unfastidious food. The Judge
  • Bestiality (except in one form to be noted later) is, on the other hand, the sexual perversion of dull, insensitive and unfastidious persons. Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 5 Erotic Symbolism; The Mechanism of Detumescence; The Psychic State in Pregnancy
  • The crowd, soon uncomfortably larger, diverted itself by taking oratorical views of his guilt or innocence: but the prevailing opinion of the prisoner personally was expressed by one in an unfastidious proverb: "Grosse crache, grosse canaille. The Young Seigneur Or, Nation-Making

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