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19 Sentences With "most unspeakable"

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

For the parents of Flint, they face the most unspeakable horror.
But the most unspeakable aspect of this calamity is the government's nonchalant response.
"A parent outliving a child — it's one of the most unspeakable things there is."
It's crass; it's violent; it speaks to some of the most unspeakable horrors of racism seen in any nation.
It's time to recall that the quest for homogeneous societies led the 20th century to its most unspeakable horrors.
Thursday's debate was about immigration, Obamacare and who could come up with the most unspeakable thing to do to ISIS.
Suddenly, someone asks you to talk about, in this confusing and frightening place, the traumatic events that compelled you to seek protection in the United States — your most unspeakable experiences.
The world has the covert reporting of citizen-journalist teams such as Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBSS) to thank for documenting the Islamic State's most unspeakable atrocities -- its mass shootings, beheadings and sex slavery.
In the show's rom-com fantasy world, they must always say the right thing, perform their vulnerability, be willing to expose their bodies — even undergo that most unspeakable horror of straight American men's nightmares: wearing a Speedo.
I learned long ago, covering the ethnic cleansing and genocide in Bosnia, never to equate victim with aggressor, never to create a false moral or factual equivalence, because then you are an accomplice to the most unspeakable crimes and consequences.
As the visceral details of these horrific developments commonly take center stage as they occur, we are afforded not only an opportunity to bear witness to the most unspeakable scenes of destruction and loss, but also, paradoxically, the best our citizenry has to offer.
"Violence comes in many different forms, but hate has the same DNA wherever you see it: whether in the form of ISIS, white supremacy, or genocide, it is the belief that another group is an existential threat to you and your community that often justifies the most unspeakable acts of violence and brutality," Abbas Barzegar, director of research and advocacy for CAIR, told CNN.
A sleek- haired, pale young man, known to his intimates and the personal paragraphs of sporting weeklies as 'Tanky', hard-drinking socialite Gifford is in company with Cynthia Drassilis early in The Little Nugget. His attentions to the young lady anger Peter Burns, who refers to Gifford as 'a most unspeakable little cad', and ends up engaged to Cynthia to keep her out of the clutches of such unsavoury men.
Teetering on the edge of overwhelming ennui, a lonely and dejected woman pays a gay man to join her for a daring, four-day exploration of sexuality in which both reject all convention and smash all boundaries while locked away from society in an isolated estate. Only when the man and woman confront the most unspeakable aspects of their sexuality will they have a pure understanding of how the sexes view one another.
Rebellion of 1641 are now dismissed as propaganda, but led to real massacres. In a sermon at Clermont during the Crusades, Urban II justified the war against Islam by claiming that the enemy "had ravaged the churches of God in the Eastern provinces, circumcised Christian men, violated women, and carried out the most unspeakable torture before killing them."Cull, Culbert, Welch, p. 23–4 Urban II's sermon succeeded in mobilizing popular enthusiasm in support of the People's Crusade.
We sense the Ineffable--and God is the reality > behind all reality, who is concerned with us and suffers with our failures, > and rejoices in our achievements. We are threatened with meaninglessness-- > and God relates to us, saving us from the dead-ends of life. We find men > capable of the most unspeakable deeds--and therefore we must address the > Hidden God so that we can help Him bring about the redemption. > Thus the idea of God is related to the idea of man.
Rummel quotes among others an official protest from the US government in 1938 to Japan, for its bombing of Chinese cities: "The bombing of non-combatant populations violated international and humanitarian laws." He also considers excess deaths of civilians in conflagrations caused by conventional means, such as in Tokyo, as acts of democide. In 1967, Noam Chomsky described the atomic bombings as "among the most unspeakable crimes in history". Chomsky pointed to the complicity of the American people in the bombings, referring to the bitter experiences they had undergone prior to the event as the cause for their acceptance of its legitimacy.
The story revolves around Angel, who as a young girl was rescued from war-torn Mozambique, and who witnessed the most unspeakable war crimes and atrocities. As an adult, in the present day, Angel becomes a "Horrorist", that is, someone who redistributes pain by unveiling to people the suffering of others. She travels America's roadways, annihilating people's solipsistic existence by exposing them to the unfettered scope of true oppression, famine and murder. Sometimes this takes the form of altered reality, such as several boys playing in the snow dying from landmines that were not there earlier.
He notes that those who opposed the war on moral rather than technical grounds are "often psychologists, mathematicians, chemists, or philosophers, ... rather than people with Washington contacts, who, of course, realize that 'had they a new, good idea about Vietnam, they would get a prompt and respectful hearing' in Washington." The topic was inspired by articles of Dwight Macdonald published after the Second World War who "asks the question: To what extent were the German or Japanese people responsible for the atrocities committed by their governments? And, quite properly, ... turns the question back to us: To what extent are the British or American people responsible for the vicious terror bombings of civilians, perfected as a technique of warfare by the Western democracies and reaching their culmination in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, surely among the most unspeakable crimes in history." The article brought Chomsky to public attention as one of the leading American intellectuals in the movement against the Vietnam war. In February 2017, on the 50th anniversary of the publication of ‘The Responsibility of Intellectuals’, a conference was held at University College London.

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