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"faultlessly" Definitions
  1. without any mistakes
"faultlessly" Synonyms
pat flawlessly impeccably ideally immaculately perfectly to a T to a nicety to a turn to the nines excellently incomparably supremely consummately peerlessly unsurpassedly outstandingly superlatively matchlessly superbly accurately precisely exactly right correctly rightly truly properly unerringly reliably validly bang on spot on without error without flaws on the money without mistakes appropriately opportunely advantageously aptly conveniently expediently usefully auspiciously beneficially favorably(US) favourably(UK) fittingly luckily profitably unblemishedly irreproachably indefectibly seamlessly absolutely exemplarily spotlessly stainlessly faithfully exquisitely cleanly guiltlessly innocently purely blamelessly sinlessly clearly inculpably cleanhandedly unimpeachably untaintedly goodly virtuously justly uprightly honestly decently ethically principledly nobly honourably(UK) righteously honorably(US) saintlily truely strictly explicitly veraciously definitely specifically authentically literally detailedly genuinely wholy unbrokenly soundly pristinely solidly unimpairedly undisturbedly sturdily stably safely uninterruptedly firmly regularly untroubledly steadily togetherly entirely meticulously scrupulously carefully conscientiously fastidiously painstakingly particularly punctiliously unwaveringly rigorously stringently thoroughly judiciously unmistakably polishedly expertly skilfully(UK) adeptly proficiently skillfully(US) masterfully adroitly dextrously(UK) dexterously(US) talentedly giftedly deftly practisedly(UK) cleverly professionally finely logically practically rationally sensibly analytically cerebrally certainly circumspectly collectedly credibly deductively discerningly infallibly intellectually intelligently justifiably objectively perspicaciously philosophically completedly maturely conclusively ripely More

61 Sentences With "faultlessly"

How to use faultlessly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "faultlessly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "faultlessly". Mastering all the usages of "faultlessly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The film's reference points, invented and otherwise, are faultlessly deployed.
The squad will appear, faultlessly, in boats and helicopters and semi trucks.
Vaccarello is also faultlessly modest — and not just when deferring importance to his atelier.
Even better, the implementation of Android 9 on the OnePlus 6T is a faultlessly smooth and pleasurable experience.
To assuage feelings of guilt, she seeks to live faultlessly, and creates a family life that is placid but false.
That reception is partly a testament to the faultlessly balanced take of "American Factory", shaped by 1,200 hours of rare footage.
A pair of nurses works the wards in both eras: one idealistic (Natalia Woolams-Torres), one practical (Kelly McAndrew), both faultlessly compassionate.
At some point, a person needs to break the cycle of swallowing his own voice to speaking into his truth faultlessly about what matters.
Back at the headquarters of Ms. Nonoo's label, in the NoHo section of Manhattan, the faultlessly polite designer betrayed a hint of relief as the conversation wrapped.
Mr. Langello's kitchen is run by professionals who seem to know by instinct when to take meat off the flame; even tricky ingredients like rabbit were faultlessly done.
They are not faultlessly reliable as an indicator of future Academy Awards, they are often an early straw poll for which way the winds may blow, at least for independent films.
Risks aside, even if Prime Air shakes out faultlessly, it indicates a future dystopia in which tiny machines are constantly whirring over our heads to simply speed up the delivery window.
He observes, for example, that "great shows have clear stakes" and good source material (he says "Annie" is "faultlessly built," in part because it owes its structural impulses to "Little Lord Fauntleroy"), and often traffic in extremes.
Once he arrived, as Tony Judt recounts in The Memory Chalet, the engineer sat by the track taking copious notes as the sturdy little engine faultlessly pulled the world's first railway train back and forth between the two cities.
Keeping up the excellent wireless performance of the AirPods, Apple's Powerbeats Pro provide a faultlessly stable connection — I've had exactly zero dropouts or signal disturbances — and they have the longest connection range of any true wireless headphones I've yet tested.
Anti-feminist redditors consider her fair game for harassment; feminists expect her to disavow her associates when they behave in anti-feminist ways; her clothing choices must be faultlessly flattering or she will face mockery, and flawlessly ethical or she will face outrage.
Written in 1798, it has the atmosphere and many of the qualities of a great English novel, except that the Bennet family has been replaced by weather and landscapes, as well as the seasonal arrival of visiting insects, all of them faultlessly described.
Though insisting that he remains faultlessly loyal, the flamboyant Mr. Johnson has done little to justify this claim in recent weeks, publishing a 4,000-word essay on Brexit in The Daily Telegraph setting out his own personal conditions for the Britain's departure deal with the European Union.
The compass is perhaps the fiddliest to use compared to a conventional one, but again works faultlessly.
A few days later, the platoon are proudly and faultlessly seen being the honour guard for Winston Churchill.
Perry is faultlessly polite to Kevin's parents, Mr and Mrs Patterson, but in one episode we see he is just as rude to his own parents as Kevin is to his, whereas Kevin is faultlessly polite to them. The character would be showcased in a special one-off episode that mixed old and new sketches. The character was so well received that a feature film Kevin and Perry Go Large was released in 2000.
Emphasis is placed on selecting and training main battle tank crew members. The crew must perform their tasks faultlessly and harmoniously so commanders select teams taking into consideration personalities and talents.
"Lardner, Jr., Ring W. "Will Hollywood Spoil Freddie Bartholomew?" Liberty. April 11, 1936. pp. 82–83. Of his role as the protagonist of Captains Courageous, Frank Nugent of the New York Times wrote, "Young Master Bartholomew ... plays Harvey faultlessly.
The Illustrated London News called the book "a moving story, faultlessly treated" and "a mediæval romance strongly to be recommended" which "[t]he spirit of the Middle Ages moves through.""The Bookseller's Window," in The Illustrated London News, Oct. 22, 1927, p. 740.
The epic states that "Vedic sacrifices [are] being faultlessly performed" and has many references to Vedic culture and Vedic texts. In the Buddhist work Manimekhalai, the submersion of the city Puhar in Kumari Kandam is attributed to the neglect of the worship to Indra.
The Jains also considered right knowledge as a prerequisite for practising . It is necessary to know what is living and what is non-living to practice faultlessly. A person who is confused between Living and non-living can never observe non-violence. Daśavaikālika Sūtra declared: It further declares: The knowledge is also considered necessary to destroy Karmas.
Shelby also posted some fast lap times, taking sixth place. In the race both Brooks and Moss retired with mechanical problems, but the Astons performed faultlessly for the majority of the distance, before Shelby's oil pump failed two laps from the finish. He placed sixth, two laps down. However, Salvadori was well-placed and competing hard for the lead.
Halm, in Rüpke (ed), 241 – 2. Public prayers (prex) were offered loudly and clearly by a priest on behalf of the community. Public religious ritual had to be enacted by specialists and professionals faultlessly; a mistake might require that the action, or even the entire festival, be repeated from the start.Hahn, in Rüpke (ed), 239 – 45.
On 10 September Tornado was officially timed for the first time, hauling 518 tons up the 1-in-176 gradient south from Rothley railway station. According to the preserved railway's president, Tornado achieved a "smooth debut" while at the GCR.Tornado steams into town Darlington and Stockton Times, 22 October 2008. Retrieved 24 October 2008 Tornado was also described as having performed in the testing and passenger runs "effortlessly" and "faultlessly".
The cricket writer Jim Kilburn suggested that Macaulay was "a great cricketer. He was great not so much in mathematical accomplishment ... as in cricketing character." Macaulay's bowling action was relaxed and effortless, being admired by his contemporaries. Kilburn wrote: "His run-up was half-shambling, his steps short and his shoulders swaying, but his feet were faultlessly placed and his aim was high at the instant of delivery".
Ascetics of the Śvētāmbara tradition wear a small mask to avoid taking in tiny insects. The observation of three or the controls of mind, speech and body and five samiti are designed to help the monks in observing the vow of Ahimsa faultlessly. A monk is required to cultivate the habit of carefulness (samti), in respect of the following five particulars:- #walking, so as not to injure any living being; #speech, so as not to cause pain to any one by offensive, disagreeable language, or by a careless use of words having a tendency to incite others to violent deeds; #eating, so as not to cause injury to any living being; #handling things — the water gourd, books and the feather whisk, with which there is a great danger of injury to small insects; and #evacuation and disposal of faeces, urine, and the like. The entire day of a Jain monk is spent in ensuring that he observes his vow of ahimsa through mind, body and speech faultlessly.
From the first, Vasilis Arvanitis was greeted with critical acclaim. Apostolos Sahinis, reviewing it in 1944, described it as "a book which can without hesitation be considered faultlessly perfect",Ta Nea Grammata 7 (1944), 142. and another reviewer, K. Despotopoulos, decided that "with Vasilis Arvanitis, Myrivilis has arrived at the peak of his artistic maturity and, at the same time, has brought this genre of our prose fiction to perfection".Philologika Chronika 2 (1944), 107.
Director Henry Koster, producer Samuel G. Engel, and cameraman Arthur Arling on the set of The Story of Ruth. The Story of Ruth received favorable reviews upon release. Variety called it "a refreshingly sincere and restrained Biblical drama, a picture that elaborates on the romantic, political and devotional difficulties encountered by the Old Testament heroine". Daniel A. Poling, editor of the Christian Herald, described the film as "[g]loriously cast and faultlessly directed".
I Am was certified double platinum in the US by the RIAA. Connie Johnson of The Los Angeles Times proclaimed that the album was "freshly innovative for EW&F.;" Eric Sieger of The Baltimore Sun also described I Am as being "faultlessly produced." A song from the LP titled "Boogie Wonderland", featuring the Emotions, got to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot Soul Songs chart and No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100.
He was a remarkably handsome man, always faultlessly dressed, and was very popular in society. His portrait appeared in shop windows with those of Brummell, the Regent, Alvanley, Kangaroo Cook, and other worthies. With the exception of Captain Ross he was the best pistol shot of his day, and in early life took part in several duels. He married first, in 1825, an opera dancer, Antoinine, daughter of Monsieur Didier of Paris.
Lilas, knowing that Carmen can only ever hope to fulfill her dream of becoming a singer in America, had faultlessly organised their escape. The small group makes its emotional farewells to their nearest and dearest, and clambers onto the home- made boat, hoping of a better future awaiting them in America / BE THIS WAY The journey doesn't last long. The boat breaks up under the enormous waves. Carmen nearly drowns and Tito is badly injured.
Not only did the correct chords have to be played: the middle voices of those chords had to succeed each other faultlessly according to certain rules.Performers were supposed to avoid consecutive fifths and octaves, duplication of the leading note, and many other pitfalls. Despite those difficulties, competent musicians acquired the art of improvising an acceptable accompaniment from a figured bass, and doing so at sight. However, after the Baroque era the art was gradually forgotten.
He was a master in counterpoint, which he studied under Gianmaria Paliardi of Genoa, and in various bowed instruments, which he studied under Piero Salvetti. He was known for his ability to play a piece of music at sightWebsite in Italian and English and then repeat it faultlessly without looking at the music.Acton, H. (1958) The Last Medici, p. 164. Aside from music, Ferdinando's other principal delight was in intimate liaisons and affairs, often with men.
A design may be well executed, faultlessly correct, and beautiful, yet worthless to the manufacturer, because it cannot be woven or printed. Machinery has its requirements and its limitations, all of which must be considered when making design, and without the practical knowledge necessary to do this an acceptable working design could not be made. The school was managed by a president and a board of directors. There were 8 instructors, all of whom were graduates of the school.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 2 January 1946 Sedgman made his debut at the Australian Championships in 1946. He won his first match against Reg Clements, but lost in the last 16 round, to Geoff Brown in straight sets. Brown played "faultlessly throughout", whilst Sedgman was "not able to settle down, and did not look comfortable".The Age, 22 January 1946 ;1947 In 1947, Sedgman lost in the opening round of the Australian Championships to Patrick Callaghan.
Medical debt refers to debt incurred by individuals due to health care costs and related expenses. Medical debt is different from other forms of debt, because it is usually incurred accidentally or faultlessly. People do not plan to fall ill or hurt themselves, and health care remedies are often unavoidable; medical debt is often treated with more sympathy than other kinds of debt resulting in advice that people ought not try to convert it to credit card debt.
Paula Vitaris from Cinefantastique gave the episode a largely positive review and awarded it three-and-a-half stars out of four. She called the entry "unabashedly emotional episode" that is "unafraid to plumb the depths of human loss and grief". Furthermore, Vitaris praised Cloke's acting; she called her "a truly gifted actor, slipping faultlessly into the skin of all of Melissa's personalities." She was, however, more critical of Duchovny, noting that his hypnosis scene was underacted.
In some areas smoke obscured the visual aids but the Eureka beacons worked faultlessly. The major innovation was the use of double-tow, whereby a C-47 towed two gliders instead of one, thereby increasing the glider lift by 50%. The IX Troop Carrier Command had practiced the technique over the previous months and found it not a difficult as had been feared. The problem of the reduced range of a C-47 towing two gliders was eliminated by using bases in the Paris area instead of in England.
The violence is defined more by the motives and the consequences to the self rather than by the act itself. Furthermore, according to Jain Scriptures, destruction of less developed organism brings about lesser karmas than destruction of developed animals and karmas generated in observance of religious duties faultlessly disappears almost immediately. Hence, it is possible to observe complete nonviolence with right knowledge, even when some outward violence occurs to living beings in the course of performing religious duties by observing carefulness and pure mental disposition without any attachment.
As "The Dead Man" ended, a new Judge Dredd story, "Tale of the Dead Man", explained how Dredd had ended up in that position. Dredd was getting older and the democratic movement was causing him to doubt his role, so Justice Department had groomed Kraken, the former Judda cloned from his bloodline, to replace him. Kraken was now ready for his final assessment, and Dredd himself was chosen to assess him. Although Kraken performed faultlessly, Dredd thought he perceived a hint of his former allegiance to the Judda in him, and failed him.
Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times said the actors coped "faultlessly" with what were difficult roles; he called Spacey's performance "the energy that drives the film", saying the actor commanded audience involvement despite Lester not always being sympathetic. "Against considerable odds, we do like [these characters]," Turan concluded. Maslin felt that Mendes directed with "terrific visual flair", saying his minimalist style balanced "the mordant and bright" and that he evoked the "delicate, eroticized power-playing vignettes" of his theater work. Jackson said Mendes' theatrical roots rarely showed, and that the "most remarkable" aspect was that Spacey's performance did not overshadow the film.
The historian of Somerset cricket, David Foot, depicts Johnson as a dashing Edwardian figure, always sporting a silk cravat while playing. Foot quotes the writer Christopher Hollis on Johnson in the 1920s: "Always faultlessly dressed, it was his habit to drive up to a match arrayed in top hat and spotless morning coat." Johnson's statistics indicate his increasing stature as a batsman. In 1902, he averaged only 14 runs per innings; the following year the average was in the mid 20s and, with some exceptions, it was mostly over 30 in the years up to 1914.
It occurs as part of a dream vision in which the makar is describing the army of goddesses he has witnessed alighting upon the earth: I would (attempt to) describe (the scene), but who could satisfactorily frame in verse the way in which all the fields were radiantly adorned by those white lilies (the landing army) that shone upwards into the sky? Not you, Homer, sublime as you were in writing, for all your faultlessly ornate diction; nor you, Cicero, whose sweet lips were so consistently lucid in rhetoric: your aureate tongues both (the Greek and the Roman) were not adequate to describe that vision in full.
He went over the bar faultlessly, but as the original measurement had been taken at the ends of the bar the height was remeasured at the middle, and the bar was found to sag so much the actual height was only 12 ft in (3.89 m) - still good for an intercollegiate record, but short of the world record. Gardner would become the first official 13 foot jumper the following month. Wagoner succeeded Gardner as captain of the Yale track team in 1913. He won the national pole vault championship that year, this time legitimately clearing 13 ft (3.96 m) for a new meeting record.
A radio adaptation of the play by Kate Clanchy was premiered by BBC Radio 3 on 19 June 2011 as part of its Money Talks season and repeated on 1 July 2012.BBC – BBC Radio 3 Programmes – Drama on 3, Money“The Week in Radio: A satirical class act that’s right on the money” – The Independent – 5 July 2012 It was the first radio play to be directed by Samuel West (who also played the minor and uncredited vocal role of a French tailor). The play was recorded at Bulwer-Lytton's stately home, Knebworth House, and the music was performed by the Endellion String Quartet. The producer was Amber Barnfather. The Financial Times described the production as “faultlessly stylish”.
Quoting Robin Horton's "From Fishing Village to City-state", the authors believed that 'whereas Elem Kalabari insisted on the complete acculturation of slaves to be integrated into the House System, Bonny does not seem to have full acculturation. Thus, although both states took part in the slave trade and absorbed large numbers of Ibo slaves into their communities, the Kalabari have preserved their language and culture, while Bonny has become bilingual in Ibo and Ibani. Thus, although the system of integration into the lineage or House System worked faultlessly in Bonny, the same policy was not pursued in the cultural field.' Much of this though had to do with early exposure to persons from other tribes particularly the Europeans.
A year later he jumped to the rival Canton Bulldogs after being offered more money to play there by former Franklin teammate, Blondy Wallace. In 1906, he took part in the two football games between Canton and Massillon that were centered on the Canton Bulldogs–Massillon Tigers betting scandal. During the first game of that series against Massillon, Jack ran the team faultlessly and dropkicked a 35-yard field goal in the first half to put the Bulldogs in front 4–0 (field goals were worth 4 points at the time) and was one of the heroes of the game. However, in the team's second game against Massillon, six punts sailed over his head while playing the safety position.
The obvious cause of the Abermule collision was the unauthorised working of the tablet machines by anyone who happened to be around, and the failure of the staff at Abermule to notify each other of their actions. The slack working practices had been allowed to develop over several years by Stationmaster Parry and Signalman Jones. A contributory cause was the failure of anyone to examine the tablet they received by removing it from its pouch and checking that it was the correct one. Although inspection of the tablet was required in the working rules, it was clearly taken for granted that the tablet was correct, since the system had worked faultlessly for years.
Dasent's Tales from the Fjeld count 51 tales = 2 original collection + 45 new collection + 3 (counts Bjørnen og reven as 4 separate bear and fox stories) + 1 (The Haunted Mill which is "Kværensagn" taken from Asbjornsen's "Norske Huldre-Eventyr og Folkesagn") Asbjørnsen and Moe evidently approved of Dasent's translations: "In France and England collections have appeared in which our tales have not only been correctly and faultlessly translated, but even rendered with exemplary truth and care nay, with thorough mastery. The English translation, by George Webbe Dasent, is the best and happiest rendering of our tales that has appeared."p. vi of their Preface from the 1874 edition The latest translation into English is by Tiina Nunnally in 2019.
For Pescarolo it was his fourth and last win at Le Mans, while for Ludwig it was his second win. After starting 3rd on the grid, the pair were only in 30th place after the first hour after pitting twice in the first 5 laps to fix a minor fuel feed problem after which the car ran almost faultlessly. The Porsche 956 dominated the final standings, taking the top seven places. The first non-Porsche 956 to finish was the Martini Racing Lancia LC2 of Bob Wollek and Alessandro Nannini. Wollek set the pole for the race with a 3:17.11 (248.873 km/h - 154.642 mp/h), some 11 seconds faster than Ludwig in the fastest Porsche.
Bedwetting, however, seems to be the least of Gerald's problems, as he suffers from a phobic reaction to school, which results in several unsuccessful sessions with a psychiatrist. Goodenow is also handicapped by a heavy-handed stepfather who is determined to make a man out of him, by physical force if necessary. Kramer and his screenwriter Mac Benoff decided to compromise Swarthout's time sequence by having the entire film set in the present with flashbacks into the past of all the boys, to explicate their presence at the camp. Whereas Swarthout's novel – thematically powerful though it is – is episodic and difficult for some sixth-graders to follow, the Kramer film flows almost faultlessly to its tragic conclusion.
Many of Harbin's Russians were wealthy, which sometime confused foreign visitors who expected them to be poor, with for instance the American writer Harry A. Franck in his 1923 book Wanderings in North China writing the Russian "ladies as well gowned as at the Paris races [who] strolled with men faultlessly garbed by European standards", leading him to wonder how they had achieved this "deceptive appearance". The Harbin Institute of Technology was established in 1920 as the Harbin Sino-Russian School for Industry to educate railway engineers via a Russian method of instruction. Students could select from two majors at the time: Railway Construction or Electric Mechanic Engineering. On 2 April 1922, the school was renamed the Sino-Russian Industrial University.
250 BCE), in which the Buddhist emperor Ashoka refers to the Greek populations under his rule. Rock Edicts V and XIII mention the Yonas (or the Greeks) along with the Kambojas and Gandharas as a subject people forming a frontier region of his empire and attest that he sent envoys to the Greek rulers in the West as far as the Mediterranean, faultlessly naming them one by one. In the Gandhari original of Rock XIII, the Greek kings to the West are associated unambiguously with the term "Yona": Antiochus is referred as "Amtiyoko nama Yonaraja" (lit. "The Greek king by the name of Antiochus"), beyond whom live the four other kings: "param ca tena Atiyokena cature 4 rajani Turamaye nama Amtikini nama Maka nama Alikasudaro nama" (lit.
The Doctor and Romana are hiding from the Black Guardian in 1920s London, having taken a townhouse and adopting the roles of a lord and lady while the TARDIS (containing K9) completes multiple random journeys as a diversion. When the Doctor builds a machine to detect energy signals as a warning device, he becomes aware of an alien presence in Hampshire. Meanwhile, Romana has encountered a feckless young aristocratic gentleman, Reginald, and this leads her into an encounter with the same creature, which is posing as the man's Auntie Florence, Lady Bassett. With the maid, Mabel Dobbs, in tow, the Doctor investigates and the two Time Lords must contend with murderous (but faultlessly polite) robot servants and their pitiless mistress, who preys on young women, and has Romana lined up as the next victim.
When Nannerl was 7, she began keyboard lessons with her father, while her three-year-old brother looked on. Years later, after her brother's death, she reminisced: > He often spent much time at the clavier, picking out thirds, which he was > ever striking, and his pleasure showed that it sounded good.... In the > fourth year of his age his father, for a game as it were, began to teach him > a few minuets and pieces at the clavier.... He could play it faultlessly and > with the greatest delicacy, and keeping exactly in time.... At the age of > five, he was already composing little pieces, which he played to his father > who wrote them down. Carmontelle, c.1763 These early pieces, K. 1–5, were recorded in the Nannerl Notenbuch.
" James Urquhart of The Independent called the book "a powerful piece of art", writing: "Besides sharp, witty dialogue, an emotionally charged plot and the vivid characters' ethical struggles, The Other Hand delivers a timely challenge to reinvigorate our notions of civilised decency". Equally, Andrew Rosenheim of Publishers Weekly found the book noteworthy for Cleave's "ability to find a redemptive grace in the midst of almost inconceivable horror." while Jeremy Jehu of The Daily Telegraph deemed it an "elegant parable" and a "challenge to every cosy, knee-jerk liberal inclined to spout off about our shared humanity and global obligations." A separate Daily Telegraph review, this by critic Ed Lake, took a dissimilar stance, opining that that book is "pervaded by a vaguely distasteful glossiness", and that "if Cleave is writing from great depths of feeling, he hides it well." Lake deemed the book "faultlessly relevant, but ultimately cloying.

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