undeserving of censure
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irreprehensible — I adjective above suspicion, above board, blameless, circumspect, exalted, faultless, free from fault, free of guilt, guiltless, honest, impeccable, incorruptible, inculpable, innocens, innocent, innoxious, inoffensive, irreproachable,… … Law dictionary
dispraise — dispraiser, n. dispraisingly, adv. /dis prayz /, v., dispraised, dispraising, n. v.t. 1. to speak of as undeserving or unworthy; censure; disparage. n. 2. an act or instance of dispraising; censure. [1300 50; ME < AF, OF despreis(i)er, equiv. to… … Universalium
dispraise — /dɪsˈpreɪz/ (say dis prayz) verb (t) (dispraised, dispraising) 1. to speak of as undeserving; censure; disparage. –noun 2. act of dispraising; censure. –dispraiser, noun –dispraising, adjective –dispraisingly, adverb …
July 1922 in the United Kingdom — See also: June 1922 in the United Kingdom, August 1922 in the United Kingdom, and the Timeline of British history. Discussion in House of LordsWhile the fighting was in progress stories of outrage were reported in England of a character worse… … Wikipedia
Hospitals — • Originally, hospital meant a place where strangers or visitors were received; in the course of time, its use was restricted to institutions for the care of the sick Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Hospitals Hospitals … Catholic encyclopedia
blameless — adjective a) Free from blame; without fault; innocent; guiltless. b) Not meriting blame or censure; undeserving of reproof … Wiktionary
irreprehensible — a. Irreproachable, irreprovable, unblamable, blameless, faultless, inculpable, innocent, undeserving of blame or censure … New dictionary of synonyms
indiscriminate — indiscriminate, wholesale, sweeping are comparable when they mean including all or nearly all within the range of choice, operation, or effectiveness. Something is indiscriminate which does not distinguish the deserving from the undeserving but… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
dispraise — dis•praise [[t]dɪsˈpreɪz[/t]] v. praised, prais•ing, n. 1) to speak of as undeserving or unworthy; censure 2) an act or instance of dispraising • Etymology: 1300–50; ME < AF, OF despreis(i) er=des dis I+preis(i) er to praise dis•prais′er, n.… … From formal English to slang