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20 Sentences With "most scrupulous"

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

One does not casually suggest throwing away America's carefully cultivated reputation as the world's most scrupulous debtor — a reputation that dates all the way back to Alexander Hamilton.
Ex-prosecutors who make it to the Supreme Court — the Sonia Sotomayors, Samuel Alitos, and perhaps Neil Gorsuchs of the world — were only the best, most scrupulous prosecutors.
Don't wait until they come to you Even the most scrupulous and watchful parent or guardian can't keep children from hearing about something as widely discussed as the coronavirus.
He too argued that wide gaps between the classes are dangerous and thought that the most scrupulous and suspicious attention should be paid to any policy plans coming from businessmen.
"The curtilage is treated as part of the home, and the home is given the most scrupulous protection under the Fourth Amendment," explained Tracey Maclin, a professor at Boston University Law.
Beardsley, the NRC official, told me the commission plans to review the regulations, which analysts credit as the most scrupulous cybersecurity standards in the ICS industry, in 2019, and update them where necessary.
This is the most scrupulous person in his profession, a true believer that any particular, even in its most granular form, is the difference between poor and average, average and good, good and great.
The study, by the Centre for European Politics, a German thinktank, shows that the currency bloc's most scrupulous devotees of fiscal orthodoxy who have been most critical of bailouts of indebted periphery countries over the years have been its greatest beneficiaries.
"The curtilage is treated as part of the home, and the home is given the most scrupulous protection under the Fourth Amendment," Tracey Maclin, a professor at Boston University Law, told VICE News in January, when the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case.
Barrington said that Yeariana possessed "a form that might serve as a perfect model for the most scrupulous statuary."Lambert 1930, pp. 234–235.
A letter from Columbus, dated 2 April 1502, to the Bank of Saint George, the oldest and most reputable of Genoa's financial institutions, begins with the words: Although some people consider this letter suspect, the vast majority of scholars believe it genuine. The most scrupulous examination by graphologists testifies in favour of authenticity.Taviani, Paolo Emilio.
They concur in that Armfield, in contrast with Robert Lumpkin among others, was the most scrupulous of the major slave traders, who would not knowingly purchase kidnapped slaves or freedmen, and whose slaves were reasonably well treated while he owned them, at least at the Duke Street facility. Slaves appeared to concur in this relatively positive picture, asking that if they were to be sold, that they be sold to Armfield. However, Armfield frequently took children from their parents and sold them South.
In him a certain light-hearted enjoyment was combined with the utmost reserve, unfailing religious faith, and the most scrupulous honour. He was all his life profoundly indifferent toward politics, both national and medical; his ideal was the unity of science and practice in the professional life. Sir James's reputation remains high due to his work as a surgeon and medical research and work, but he also had an apparent interest in criminal matters. In 1886, he followed the Pimlico Mystery, the poisoning trial of Adelaide Bartlett for the murder of her husband Edwin.
The articles titled" Four months in the Territory" appeared from 18 November 1898 to 13 January 1899. Throughout his life Keane always appeared to be short of money, a fact Gillen noted in his letter to Baldwin but he explained that once he received money he was most scrupulous about repaying his debts. By 1903 Keane was in Queensland employed at a saw mill in Mosman. He also claimed he worked as a sugarcane cane cutter to ascertain the ability of Europeans to perform hard manual labour in the Tropics.
It appeared to him that the grant of £3,000 should be laid out with the most scrupulous care, and only for those repairs which were necessary in furnishing the poor with religious instruction. Not one shilling of this money should be laid out in decorations or ornamental work of any kind. He was determined to carry out this principle. He believed this view of the case was not a peculiar one, as it was announced by the members of the scheme at the vestry and he had no doubt that the decorations needed in the Church would be done by subscription raised in another way.
Opposition parties in the House of Commons, including Labour and the Scottish National Party, called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend the export of riot shields, tear gas and other equipment to the United States on 2 June. An open letter was sent to the Prime Minister by Labour MP Emily Thornberry, the Shadow Secretary of State for International Trade, calling the continued supply of riot control equipment to US law enforcement a "disgrace". Johnson responded stating that he would look into any concerns but insisted that exports are subject to "consolidated guidance" to ensure they were not misused, and that the UK is the most "scrupulous country in the world in that regard". The letter was signed by 166 MPs from across all parties in the Commons by 5 June.
Even so, what was done at these meetings continued to seem pointless to the Directory and it annulled electoral operations that same year, despite the most scrupulous observation of its regulatory decisions. In year 10 (1801–02) he was called to join the Saint-Domingue expedition, commanded by general Charles Victor Emmanuel Leclerc, but returned to France in year 11 (1802–03) after Leclerc's death. He was given the cross of the Légion d'honneur in year 12 (1804) and was made a commander of the order on 14 June 1804. He then held the command of Belle-Île-en-Mer for many years, heading several public works which made that port almost impregnable, but was removed from it in disgrace (though the causes of that disgrace remain unclear).
According to the French Code of Penal Procedure, all jurors must individually swear to the following message from the judge presiding the court: :You swear and promise to examine with the most scrupulous attention the charges that will be laid against [the defendant]; to betray neither the interests of the defendant, nor the interests of the society that accuses him, nor the interests of the victim; not to communicate with anybody until you [declare your verdict]; not to listen to hatred, malice, fear or affection; to remember that the defendant is presumed to be innocent and that doubt must benefit him; to decide for yourself according to the charges and the means of defense, according to your conscience and intimate conviction, with the impartiality and firmness that befits an honest and free person, and to keep the secret of the deliberations, even after you cease to be a juror.
Mark Noble suggests that Claypole had a mild and gentle disposition that rendered him unfit for any services for the Protectors, but such as were of a peaceable kind, and which they were lavish in giving to him, both as the husband of Oliver's favourite child, and as a most amiable person Oliver employed. Instead therefore, of appointing Claypole to be a major- general, where severity and rigour was necessary, Oliver gave him places of great honour and emolument, but of such a nature as that the most scrupulous might accept. As Claypole had never, during the whole time of his relations holding the helm, done any action that could even inconvenience an individual, at the restoration of the monarchy he was included in the general pardon, unlike those who had participated in acts such as the regicide of Charles I who were exempted from the general pardon and were tried for crimes committed during the Interregnum. Until her death in 1665 Claypole gave shelter to Elizabeth Cromwell, his mother-in-law and Oliver Cromwell's widow.
Maier, Charles The Unmasterable Past Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1988 page 101 As an advocate of history as a social science, Bracher took a strong dislike to Nolte's philosophical theories of generic fascism.Maier, Charles The Unmasterable Past Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1988 page 87 In a 1971 review, the American historian Lucy Dawidowicz called The German Dictatorship "...a work of unparalleled distinction, combing the most scrupulous objectivity with a passionate commitment to the democratic ethos".Dawidowicz, Lucy S. Review of The German Dictatorship: The Origins, Structure and Effects of National Socialism pages 91–93 from Commentary, Volume 52, Issue # 2, August 1971 page 91. In 1989, the British historian Richard J. Evans called The German Dictatorship a "valuable" bookEvans, Richard In Hitler’s Shadow, Pantheon: New York, 1989 page 186. Bracher often criticized the functionist-structuralist interpretation of the Third Reich championed by such scholars such as Martin Broszat and Hans Mommsen, and decried their view of Hitler as a “weak dictator”. In Bracher's view, Hitler was the “Master of the Third Reich”.Kershaw, Ian The Nazi Dictatorship : Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation, London : Arnold ; New York page 73.

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