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"scrupulousness" Definitions
  1. careful attention to every detail synonym meticulousness
  2. care that you take to be honest and do what is right

38 Sentences With "scrupulousness"

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

For anonymous donations, it's very rare that any scrupulousness is used.
After I was gone, I confess, I took advantage of that patience and scrupulousness.
And he has reinforced that reputation for scrupulousness by running a high-minded campaign.
I'm afraid, in fact, your seeming scrupulousness misses the point of what ethics, properly understood, requires.
If Icahn's raid on Washington has proved unsuccessful, he cannot blame the scrupulousness of the Trump Administration.
Together, they form a commanding statement from an artist who has combined documentary scrupulousness with manifest compassion.
The responsibility of deciding the fate of a fellow-creature will "naturally inspire scrupulousness and caution," wrote Hamilton.
There is a scrupulousness in his depiction of the queen's inner sanctum, attention down to the last dessert fork.
One college sophomore had repeatedly ignored his partner's hesitation during a hookup, despite his own professed scrupulousness about consent.
This makes Mueller the latest in a long list of figures whose scrupulousness saved Trump from the consequences of his unscrupulousness.
In their scrupulousness, it is hard not to feel the artist's desire to slow down time as much as possible, to be attentive to each detail, no matter how minuscule, within the welter of visual information he is bringing together.
As the Trump administration's been sent into a death spiral over the firing of FBI Director James Comey last week — a failed move to curtail the Justice Department investigation into contact between his campaign and the Russian government — Kushner hasn't been the "adult in the room" urging caution and scrupulousness.
Respected and sometimes resented for his scrupulousness in translating Chinese medical texts, Dr. Unschuld, a tall man of regal bearing, harks back to an era of scholarship, when people who engaged with China were called Sinologists — those who studied broad swaths of the Chinese world that reflected their wide-ranging interests.
As a personality trait, scrupulosity is a recognized diagnostic criterion for obsessive–compulsive personality disorder. It is sometimes called "scrupulousness", but that word properly applies to the positive trait of having scruples.
There are a number of circumstances, under which the prohibition of yichud may be circumvented. Typically, these apply fully to yichud with an observant Jew. Meeting a non-Jew or a secular Jew may require more scrupulousness.
After Gallet's death, Saint-Saëns wrote: > I wish I knew what to say about the man himself, his unwearying goodness, > his loyalty, his scrupulousness, his good humor, his originality, his > continual common sense, and his intellect, alert to everything unusual and > interesting.
Conrad in 1900 contributed this story to "The Ladysmith Treasury," to provide aid to English citizens besieged in Ladysmith, South Africa, during the Boer War. Often compared with Heart of Darkness, Conrad considered it his best tale, owing to its "scrupulousness of tone" and "severity of discipline".
Governor Claveria made it clear that such had not been the case, so the government was to refrain from exercising any sovereignty over them. Such was the scrupulousness with which this matter of free consent was regarded by Spain. Even as late as 1881 the same criterion would be followed by the Spanish government.
Al-Rabi ibn Khuthaym al-Thawri (d.ca 682) was a pupil of Abdullah ibn Masud and a famous tabi'i ascetic of Kufa. Constantly ill with a form of palsy, in later generations he became a symbol of endurance in the face of suffering. He emphasized the importance of silence, scrupulousness in religious observance, and the fear of Hell.
Shuʿba bin al-Ḥajjāj bin al-Ward, Abū Bisṭām al-ʿAtakī () (c. 85–160/704–776 AH/CE) was an early, devout Muslim, who was known for both his knowledge of poetry and of ḥadīth. His scrupulousness in ḥadīth transmission, alongside other scholars such as Sufyān al-Thawrī, is understood to have laid the foundation for the concretization of ḥadīth sciences.
A diminutive figure who stood less than tall, Schwester Selma was known for her kindness and her scrupulousness. She adopted as her personal motto a poem by Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore, which she kept on the wall in her room: :I slept and dreamt :that life was joy. :I awoke and saw :that life was duty. :I acted and behold, :duty was joy.
To that end, he planted wheat in the backyard of the synagogue, separating from it the terumah and ma'aser, and relinquished the pe'ah. He would then harvest it for use in his own specially prepared Passover matzo, which he then distributed. He also kept a donkey for the fulfillment of the petter hamor. Hussein demanded this kind of scrupulousness from his peers as well.
Abu Zakariya Yahya ibn Mu'adh al-Razi (830–871 CE) was a Muslim Sufi who taught in Central Asia. One of the first to teach Sufism in masajid, he left a number of books and sayings. Despite his emphasis on raja, the hope for Jannah and for Allah's forgiveness, he was renowned for his perseverance in worship and his great scrupulousness in matters of religion.Abu Nu'aym, x.
His dozen stories are bracingly different, weaving changes in tone and format, and in varieties of language, ranging from street-smart to the quasi-academic. … For the reader there is much work to be done, … Since Cameron’s scrupulousness in everything he writes is undeniable, one wonders why this is so. By persevering, the reader’s reward is often to hear the distant rumble of the gods of rational discourse – crying out, inciting passion and sometimes laughing as they go.
He, Letourneur and Maret were the three plenipotentiaries sent to Lille in summer 1797 for (fruitless) peace negotiations with Britain. During his stay in Lille, on 19 July 1797, the Directory named him Minister of the Navy and the Colonies, to replace Admiral Laurent Truguet. Also in 1797 he was made a rear admiral. As minister, he was once again remarked upon for his unselfishness, honesty and scrupulousness in a regime particularly marked by general corruption among the political and administrative elites.
Although he saw Cicero as the ideological instigator of Caesar's murder, he also considered Cicero to be an artist of nature. The murder of Caesar attested to the blindness and scrupulousness of the senatorial oligarchy, which in turn no way supported a republican order. In his eyes, the outrage against Caesar arose from the conflict between the Greek-influenced upper class, and with Caesar, who bore the stamp of the native Roman tradition. He based his work on Octavian's rise primarily on literary sources.
Vincent Illuzzi." The editorial criticized the Court for its handling of the case and commented: "The court restored Illuzzi's license to practice law this week, but that is no more remedy than a bank robber's returning the cash. Illuzzi, who never deserved to lose his license in the first place, should have had it back six months ago."The text of the full Free Press editorial read as follows: "Reasonable people would think, with the state Supreme Court under political attack, the justices would make a point of excessive scrupulousness these days.
" Ali Effendi and the town mayor also condemn it. They do not prevent it from happening. The mayor, who Caesar described as "henpecked", distracts himself from the affair by trying to engage in sexual intercourse with a servant girl, and Caesar states that "the scene of his pitiful sexual impotence with a willing servant girl [is] paralleling his moral impotence." Allen states that the story contrasts the Sufi's "gentle scrupulousness" with the Brotherhood's "aggressive indifference to anything outside their religious/political aims" and that "Awadallah's conversion ceremony is compared, not subtly, to the Crucifixion.
A fragment of his work in the manuscript of Jean d'Outremeuse's Ly Myreur des Histors, was discovered in 1847; and the whole of his chronicle, preserved in the library of Chálons-sur- Marne, was edited in 1863 by L. Polain. In the matter of style Le Bel has been placed by some critics on the level of Froissart. His chief merit is his refusal to narrate events unless either he himself or his informant had witnessed them. This scrupulousness in the acceptance of evidence must be set against his limitations.
Much of what is known of Ann Reynolds Story's life on the northeastern frontier comes from the 1860 History of Salisbury, Vermont written by John M. Weeks (1788–1858), who was Ann's neighbor during her last 28 years in Salisbury.Weeks had moved to Salisbury in 1789, and he writes that, "The writer lived a neighbor to [Ann Story] from his infancy to the time of her death, and can vouch for the scrupulousness she always manifested for the truth of her stories, (of which she used to tell a great many), concerning the times of the American revolution." See History of Salisbury, pp. viii and 224.
Garrison came under contemporary criticism from writers including Sylvia Meagher, who in 1967 wrote: > ... as the Garrison investigation continued to unfold, it gave cause for > increasingly serious misgivings about the validity of his evidence, the > credibility of his witnesses, and the scrupulousness of his methods. According to Shaw's defense team, witnesses, including Russo, claimed to have been bribed and threatened with perjury and contempt of court charges by Garrison in order to make his case against Shaw.Gerald Posner, Case Closed, p. 441. However, in a later interview with public radio, Russo stated: > Well the truth of the matter was that Garrison was very sincere.
Such guidelines on academic scrupulousness, honesty and enlightened tolerance, prerequisite for genuine scholarship in Comparative Religion, have always stood Joshi in good stead when he, himself a professing Buddhist, in his later writings dealt with other religions, especially with Jainism, Hinduism and Sikhism. Back in India he was appointed Associate Professor of Buddhist Studies at the Department of Religious Studies, Punjabi University, a post he held from 1971 to 1975. In 1976 the same university offered him a professorship until 1981. In addition to his appointment he had to accept responsibility as editor of his department's biannual publication of The Journal of Religious Studies.
La Stampa. Retrieved 27 June 2017 . In middle age, De Giosa began an active conducting career. According to musicologist Andrea Lanza, as a conductor he was "particularly admired for the scrupulousness of his orchestral balance and ensemble." He was Chief Conductor at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples for several seasons between 1860 and 1876, conducting amongst other performances, the premiere of Mercadante's Virginia in 1866 and the posthumous premiere of Donizetti's Gabriella di Vergy in 1869. His other conducting posts included the 1867–68 season at La Fenice in Venice, the 1870–71 season at the Khedivial Opera House in Cairo, and the 1873 season at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires.
Among the sample entries which Gansevoort made showing his academic scrupulousness was "Pequot, beautiful description of the war with," with a short title reference to the place in Benjamin Trumbull's A Complete History of Connecticut (Volume I in 1797, and Volume II in 1898) where the description could be found. The two surviving volumes of Gansevoort's are the best evidence for Melville's reading in this period. Gansevoort's entries include books Melville used for Moby-Dick and Clarel, such as "Parsees—of India—an excellent description of their character, and religion and an account of their descent—East India Sketch Book p. 21". Other entries are on Panther, the pirate's cabin, and storm at sea from James Fenimore Cooper's The Red Rover, Saint-Saba.
In Germany at the turn of the 19th century, the Sturm und Drang movement in literature began to shift the perception of man's relationship to the world and, though Senff would create images of the movement's major players (including Friedrich Maximilian Klinger who wrote the drama that gave the epoch its name), his work remained quite conservative. At the outset of the movement, his canvasses began to resemble the Biedermeier style whereby, according to art historian Sergey Kuznetsov, "portraits, landscapes and still-lifes were painted with equal scrupulousness." Kuznetsov notes that unlike the burgeoning group of Romantic artists of the period, "Senff’s landscapes are completely purged of feeling, and they focus on the accurate and precise representation of detail." Senff's work has been frequently compared to Ivan Khrutsky in Vilnius.
The saint also reformed the convents of Obermünster and Niedermünster at Regensburg, chiefly by giving them as an example the convent of St. Paul, Mittelmünster, at Regensburg, which he had founded in 983. He also co-operated in the reform of the ancient and celebrated Benedictine Abbey of Niederaltaich, which had been founded by the Agilolfinger dynasty, and which from that time took on new life. He showed genuine episcopal generosity in the liberal manner with which he met the views of the Emperor Otto II regarding the intended reduction in size of his diocese for the benefit of the new Diocese of Prague (975), to which Saint Adalbert was appointed first bishop. As prince of the empire he performed his duties towards the emperor and the empire with the utmost scrupulousness and, like Saint Ulrich, was one of the mainstays of the Ottonian policies.
Grant opines that Antoninus and his officers did act in a resolute manner dealing with frontier disturbances of his time, although conditions for long-lasting peace were not created. On the whole, according to Grant, Marcus Aurelius' eulogistic picture of Antoninus seems deserved, and Antoninus appears to have been a conservative and nationalistic (although he respected and followed Hadrian's example of Philhellenism moderately) Emperor who was not tainted by the blood of either citizen or foe, combined and maintained Numa Pompilius' good fortune, pacific dutifulness and religious scrupulousness, and whose laws removed anomalies and softened harshnesses. Krzysztof Ulanowski argues that the claims of military inability are exaggerated, considering that although the sources praise Antoninus' love for peace and his efforts "rather to defend, than enlarge the provinces", he could hardly be considered a pacifist, as shown by the conquest of the Lowlands, the building of the Antonine Wall and the expansion of Germania Superior. Ulianowski also praises Antoninus for being successful in deterrence by diplomatic means.
Jokl and Gazulli corresponded actively. Jokl actively consulted with Gazulli for etymological insights. While Jokl found words such as shkarthdhi (“scattered”) and pershkardhë (“whitewashed”), for instance, to be of Slavic origin, Nikollë found the same pattern in place names such as Gomsiqe, Bardhanjol, and Kashnjet. Always on the lookout for rare, previously unwritten words, Gazulli asked Jokl on December 14, 1930, to borrow a book or dictionary to explain their meaning in other languages. Gazulli’s scrupulousness was ridiculed by the erudite Karl Gurakuqi, the High Inspector of Education and promoter of Gazulli’s who censored some erotic words from Fjalorth i ri that were considered uncouth at the time. Gazulli wrote Fjalorin Onomastik under the pseudonym, “Gelasius.” His work was rarely quoted during the communist regime, though the few exceptions included Eqrem Çabej and Xhuvani’s essays, “Parashtesat e gjuhes shqipe” (“Prefixes in the Albanian Language,” 1956) and “Prapashtesat e gjuhes shqipe” (“Suffixes in the Albanian Language,” 1962), which both cite Fjalorth i ri. The compilers of the Fjalor i gjuhes shqipe (“Dictionary of the Albanian Language”) published in 1954 cited Gazulli as well, including Çabej, Kostaq Cipo, Mahir Domi, Anton Krajni, and Osman Myderizi.

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