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worthiness

[ US /ˈwɝðinɪs/ ]
[ UK /wˈɜːðɪnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. the quality or state of having merit or value

How To Use worthiness In A Sentence

  • The helicopter has a high level of crashworthiness, including impact tolerance and redundancy in vital systems and components.
  • But FAA regulations require that if a mandatory inspection or other so-called airworthiness directive is skipped, the aircraft must be pulled out of service immediately until the work is done. Southwest Could Pay Record Fine to FAA
  • Consumers are currently provided with two separate measures to consider when purchasing a vehicle: crashworthiness (and sometimes aggressivity) and fuel economy.
  • I spent the entire night before my Communion in the bathroom hurling up my unworthiness.
  • Liability for seaworthiness is one of"least legal obligations"of carriers.
  • Now obedience to a superior is due in accordance with the divinely established order of things, as shown above A. 1, and therefore it is a good, since good consists in mode, species, and order, as Augustine states.6 Again, this act has a special aspect of praiseworthiness by reason of its object. The Political Ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas
  • The problem is not the praiseworthiness of Old England.
  • The criminal law normally reflects culpability and blameworthiness for moral wrong in a general sense.
  • Some cabins on the lower decks were awash, giving the clue to the vessel's general lack of seaworthiness.
  • These include the common moral decencies of integrity, trustworthiness, benevolence, and fairness.
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