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单词 unobjectionable
释义

Definition of unobjectionable in English:

unobjectionable

adjective ʌnəbˈdʒɛkʃ(ə)nəb(ə)lˌənəbˈdʒɛkʃ(ə)nəb(ə)l
  • Not objectionable; acceptable.

    the bail conditions were unobjectionable as far as he was concerned
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As nakedness goes, the piece is a fairly tame, unobjectionable example.
    • That would have been mushy but unobjectionable.
    • So, to recap - Clayton finds punitive damages unobjectionable on moral grounds, but dislikes the natural procedural workings of the system that's necessary for cases to be brought under the adversarial system.
    • Much of the policing so far is unobjectionable in its goals and motivation but barely acceptable in the costs to innocent civilian bystanders.
    • Other typical questions, and appropriate unobjectionable neutral answers, include: What magazines and newspapers do you subscribe to or read regularly?
    • In contrast to the graphic and scary depiction of parental behaviour in previous NSPCC initiatives, today's ‘Someone To Turn To’ campaign appears unobjectionable.
    • That statement is true, and therefore unobjectionable.
    • The consolation here is that the garden is clean and unobjectionable, requiring no more than grass cutting from Graham and general weeding and pruning from me.
    • While the day-to-day coverage of the campaign was unobjectionable, no newspaper conducted a serious investigation into Bloomberg's history.
    • And exuberance is surely sometimes entirely unobjectionable, not least in a book that praises it.
    • The new forms of state intervention into our private lives are seen as unobjectionable by many commentators and intellectuals; indeed, they see them as desirable.
    • The first change concerned the distribution of powers between the members of the commission and is unobjectionable if the proper procedure had been followed.
    • I am glad that I added Jack's blog to my list of unobjectionable content (check out his recent post on anthrax).
    • But even this unobjectionable piece was marred by Woodruff's need to explain that ‘blog’ is short for ‘web log.’
    • Some small measure of this may be unobjectionable, but if the War on Terrorism takes as long as the administration warns, it will become unbearably stultifying.
    • More evidence that racism is unobjectionable as long as it is in the service of liberalism.
    • Bush got what he wanted - a Supreme Court nominee too unobjectionable to be filibustered.
    • Structural regulation, not involving direct control of speech but intended to make sure that the market works well, is also unobjectionable.
    • With this easy-to-use device, not available in stores, you can repackage an unobjectionable or toadying remark as an act of verbal courage.
    • In some cases, like eligibility for social welfare payments, the targets can be identified fairly objectively by income testing and the process is unobjectionable.
    Synonyms
    unexciting, uninteresting, uninspired, uninspiring, dull, bland, flat, insipid, spiritless, pedestrian, vapid, lifeless, dead, colourless, run-of-the-mill, mediocre, ordinary, prosaic, humdrum, boring, tedious, tiresome, wearisome

Derivatives

  • unobjectionableness

  • noun
  • unobjectionably

  • adverb
    • Set beside the lives of his contemporaries ensconced in the unobjectionably attractive stability of writing-program appointments, his biography has long seemed the stuff of legend.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And Posner notes, quite unobjectionably, that the entire field should not be rejected merely because one does not accept the views of its most aggressive exponents.
      • Likewise, the desserts are all fun and unobjectionably sweet (the tiramisu is particularly good, though).
      • Last sodden weekend I almost felt the need for a ‘right to swim’, so targeted Runswick Bay where the sea would be unobjectionably wet, and the beach is my favourite.
      • That would reverse the Massachusetts Goodridge decision - but it would also keep courts from doing the normal sort of gap-filling definition that courts routinely (and largely unobjectionably) do.
 
 

Definition of unobjectionable in US English:

unobjectionable

adjectiveˌənəbˈjekSH(ə)nəb(ə)lˌənəbˈdʒɛkʃ(ə)nəb(ə)l
  • Not objectionable; acceptable.

    he thought he would become a storyteller, an unobjectionable hobby
    Example sentencesExamples
    • That would have been mushy but unobjectionable.
    • And exuberance is surely sometimes entirely unobjectionable, not least in a book that praises it.
    • As nakedness goes, the piece is a fairly tame, unobjectionable example.
    • So, to recap - Clayton finds punitive damages unobjectionable on moral grounds, but dislikes the natural procedural workings of the system that's necessary for cases to be brought under the adversarial system.
    • With this easy-to-use device, not available in stores, you can repackage an unobjectionable or toadying remark as an act of verbal courage.
    • More evidence that racism is unobjectionable as long as it is in the service of liberalism.
    • Some small measure of this may be unobjectionable, but if the War on Terrorism takes as long as the administration warns, it will become unbearably stultifying.
    • The consolation here is that the garden is clean and unobjectionable, requiring no more than grass cutting from Graham and general weeding and pruning from me.
    • Other typical questions, and appropriate unobjectionable neutral answers, include: What magazines and newspapers do you subscribe to or read regularly?
    • Much of the policing so far is unobjectionable in its goals and motivation but barely acceptable in the costs to innocent civilian bystanders.
    • In contrast to the graphic and scary depiction of parental behaviour in previous NSPCC initiatives, today's ‘Someone To Turn To’ campaign appears unobjectionable.
    • I am glad that I added Jack's blog to my list of unobjectionable content (check out his recent post on anthrax).
    • The first change concerned the distribution of powers between the members of the commission and is unobjectionable if the proper procedure had been followed.
    • While the day-to-day coverage of the campaign was unobjectionable, no newspaper conducted a serious investigation into Bloomberg's history.
    • The new forms of state intervention into our private lives are seen as unobjectionable by many commentators and intellectuals; indeed, they see them as desirable.
    • Structural regulation, not involving direct control of speech but intended to make sure that the market works well, is also unobjectionable.
    • But even this unobjectionable piece was marred by Woodruff's need to explain that ‘blog’ is short for ‘web log.’
    • Bush got what he wanted - a Supreme Court nominee too unobjectionable to be filibustered.
    • That statement is true, and therefore unobjectionable.
    • In some cases, like eligibility for social welfare payments, the targets can be identified fairly objectively by income testing and the process is unobjectionable.
    Synonyms
    unexciting, uninteresting, uninspired, uninspiring, dull, bland, flat, insipid, spiritless, pedestrian, vapid, lifeless, dead, colourless, run-of-the-mill, mediocre, ordinary, prosaic, humdrum, boring, tedious, tiresome, wearisome
 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 13:37:20