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"pardonable" Definitions
  1. that can be forgiven or excused

30 Sentences With "pardonable"

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

Yours, in short, was a venial sin — a pardonable offense.
What happened, then, was surely a result of a pardonable misunderstanding.
Pardonable sins, like eating too many sweets or drinking beer, are fine.
The former sort can be presented, even in Birch histories less personal than hers, as pardonable or consoling.
In this case, to be fair, the length is a pardonable fault, for there is plenty here on which to feast.
" Other council of Islamic scholars in Pakistan have issued fatwas against honor killings, calling them an "un-Islamic and un-pardonable sin.
On Wednesday, the senate's legal committee approved amendments to the bill to include influence peddling and bribe-taking on a list of pardonable offences.
So, if a state prosecutor, such as New York's Attorney General or the New York County District Attorney (both of whom are reportedly investigating Manafort independently of Mueller) were to charge Manafort for any offense, he will not be pardonable for the state offenses even if they are the same offenses.
" 21908 "We must bring people to understand that it is not enough to proclaim war to be a crime, but that it is necessary for all men to recognize with every sense and emotion that the murder of hundreds of thousands of human beings to settle an international dispute is no more justifiable, no more pardonable than the murder of a single individual to settle some personal quarrel.
He excused his own betrayal of Athens, saying for a man "it was pardonable to plot evil against a man who was his enemy even to the disadvantage of the state".
All three of her brothers were killed during the war and her parents died shortly after of influenza. She is married to Douglas Partridge, a famous author and poet.Jacqueline Winspear, Pardonable Lies (2005), pp. 9–10. She smokes cigarettes.
The first graduation was held in June 1910; there were four graduates. An addition with an auditorium was added to the original structure in 1916. Fire destroyed this building in 1918.Craddock, Steven Culver (2009). A Greater Degree of Pardonable Pride: A Centennial History of Cleveland High School, 1906-2006.
The sins of humankind are the frailties of free-will and are pardonable. That of the serpent is the sin against the Holy Ghost which is without absolution. But if Eve is not to blame, why is she cursed at all? Because that is what a knowledge between good and evil is.
The 1910 Giles translation of The Art of War succeeded British officer Everard Ferguson Calthrop's 1905 and 1908 translations, and refuted large portions of Calthrop's work. In the Introduction, Giles writes: > It is not merely a question of downright blunders, from which none can hope > to be wholly exempt. Omissions were frequent; hard passages were willfully > distorted or slurred over. Such offenses are less pardonable.
The cause lay partly in the difficult circumstances of the loosely-knit Prussian monarchy, but partly in Hardenberg's character, which, never well balanced, had deteriorated with age. He continued amiable, charming and enlightened as ever; but the excesses which had been pardonable in a young diplomatist were a scandal in an elderly chancellor, and could not but weaken his influence with so pious a Landesvater as Frederick William III.
In book three, Adomnán describes different apparitions of the Saint, both that Columba receives and those that are seen by others regarding him. He mentions that, "For indeed after the lapse of many years, ... St. Columba was excommunicated by a certain synod for some pardonable and very trifling reasons, and indeed unjustly" (P.79- 80). In one of the accounts, Columba, in this period of excommunication, goes to a meeting held against him in Teilte.
Additionally, those who believe in God, but have led sinful lives, may be punished for a time, and then eventually released into Paradise. If anyone dies in a state of Shirk (i.e. associating God in any way, such as claiming that He is equal with anything or denying Him), this is not pardonable—he or she will stay forever in Hell. Once a person is admitted to Paradise, this person will abide there for eternity.
The head of the group and anti-gay activist Dereje Negash said: > Children are being raped by gay people in this country. Just yesterday we > have met a woman whose boy was raped by two other men. All in all, gay acts > are against health, the law, religion and our culture, so we should break > the silence and create awareness about it. The rally objective was to produce a bill on homosexuality into non-pardonable offence.
He and Graham added 13 runs, but Alexander was caught at slip off Steel with Harrow still 10 runs short of the target, playing inside a ball that did not turn, at one minute before 6pm. Eton won by 9 runs. It was said that the cheering could be heard at London Zoo, some distance away in Regent's Park, and at Paddington Station. The Times reported that "most pardonable pandemonium reigned for fully half an hour".
These remnants were discovered among the Epicurean library in the Villa of the Papyri, Herculaneum. Because, as W. H. D. Rouse notes, "the fragments are so minute and bear so few certainly identifiable letters", at this point in time "some scepticism about their proposed authorship seems pardonable and prudent." However, Kleve contends that four of the six books are represented in the fragments, which he argues is reason to assume that the entire poem was at one time kept in the library.
She was happy and respected, and in a letter written to England in about 1807 she says with pardonable pride "all my quantances are my betters"—she had little education and her spelling was always her own. She was pardoned on 31 January 1814 but did not return to England. Little is known about the last 10 years of her life, but she continued her nursing, died on 13 May 1819 after catching influenza from a shepherd she was nursing. She was buried in the graveyard of St Peter's church at Richmond, New South Wales.
UTS in 1920 University of Toronto Schools was founded in 1910 as a "practice school", also known as a laboratory school, for the University of Toronto's Faculty of Education.Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools As originally conceived and reflected in its present name, UTS was intended to be a collection of at least two schools, one of which would enroll female students. The original plan was to recruit 200 teachers and 1200 students, but financial constraints limited the number of students to 375 boys. UTS's first headmaster was H. J. "Bull" Crawford, who also taught Classics at the school.
I had, however, gratified a pardonable journalistic ambition in being the first correspondent to reach him and to give him news of the world, after his long period of African darkness. That I had done this under most trying conditions, Mr. Stanley fully appreciated; and warmly reciprocated by showing me every courtesy in his power, on the march to the coast, in Zanzibar, and in Egypt.Stevens, Thomas (1890), Scouting for Stanley, Cassell Publishing, New York City, p288 Stevens then reported from Russia, sailed the rivers of Europe, and investigated miracles claimed by Indian ascetics. His conclusions that "the stories of travelers, from Marco Polo to the latest witness of Indian miracles...are quite true" were greeted with scepticism and his career faltered.
210 Bridges believed that the final lines redeemed an otherwise bad poem. Arthur Quiller-Couch responded with a contrary view and claimed that the lines were "a vague observation – to anyone whom life has taught to face facts and define his terms, actually an uneducated conclusion, albeit most pardonable in one so young and ardent." The debate expanded when I. A. Richards, an English literary critic who analysed Keats's poems in 1929, relied on the final lines of the "Ode on a Grecian Urn" to discuss "pseudo-statements" in poetry: > On the one hand there are very many people who, if they read any poetry at > all, try to take all its statements seriously – and find them silly ... This > may seem an absurd mistake but, alas! it is none the less common.
In a report in Times of India, Manjari Mishra and V N Arora accused Rambhadracharya of committing a "blasphemous act of challenging the mighty pen of the Goswami". Nritya Gopal Das, president of Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas, was quoted by Times of India as saying, "How dare he ... he has committed an pardonable [sic] sin and must own it up". A Zee News report accused Rambhadracharya of "changing dohas to chaupais" and vice versa, "changing the wordings of several verses", and "renaming Laṅkākāṇḍa to Yuddhakāṇḍa". Zee News reported that a Mantra of page 59 of the edition called Rambhadracharya a Rishi, and quoted that The Akhil Bharatiya Akhara Parishad chairperson Mahant Gyan Das as questioning how Rambhadracharya could be called a Rishi, a term used for the likes of Vamadeva, Jabali and Vasistha.
Instead, he attributed his inspiration to a vague story from Manx legal history:'The Master of Man' in Manx Quarterly, Douglas: S. K. Broadbent, Vol. IV, No. 27, October 1921, pp. 257 - 262 > There was [a] judicial scandal in the Isle of Man, which [...] somehow > entered into the region of the heroic, partly by reason of the part played > in it by a great and noble woman. That was the scandal whereof the main > features form the groundwork of the following story - the story of a sin, > perhaps a little or at least a natural and pardonable sin, which, being > concealed and denied at the beginning, went on and on from consequence to > consequence (as all hidden sins must), increasing like a snowball in weight > and momentum until it was in danger of submerging with an avalanche the > entire community.
He also said the Indians had used camouflage long before its alleged invention by the French, but others had misinterpreted it as the body painting of savages. In Rhode Island he addressed the Newport Tower mystery, saying, "the red man has always been a believer in education and civilization". He referred to the Great Spirit guiding Indians to peace and the ceremony of the Peace Pipe and suggested that the tower was such a temple, comparing it with other native American structures across North and South America. An article from 1919 states, "With all the eloquence of his race ... [he] pleaded ... for the freedom of his people and advocated the right of citizenship for them ... Strongheart flayed the white race for its treatment of the red man, advocated allowing his people to leave the reservations and told with pardonable pride, of their fine war record".
He was a hero of John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, "the best-read and most widely regarded pamphleteers of prerevolutionary times." In their 1720-1723 essays Cato's Letters, they adopted Sidney's argument that "free men always have the right to resist tyrannical government"; those essays, in turn, inspired the name of the modern libertarian think tank the Cato Institute. Thomas Jefferson believed Sidney and Locke to be the two primary sources for the Founding Fathers' view of liberty. John Adams wrote to Jefferson in 1823 on the subject of Sidney: The Whig historian Thomas Babington Macaulay said of Sidney in 1828: But in 1848, Macaulay wrote of the Whig opposition to Charles II: The libertarian philosopher Friedrich Hayek quoted Sidney's Discourses on the title page of his The Constitution of Liberty: "Our inquiry is not after that which is perfect, well knowing that no such thing is found among men; but we seek that human Constitution which is attended with the least, or the most pardonable inconveniences".
In one of the most famous of her books, Pardonable Lies, Maisie takes on the case of Ralph Lawton, a former Royal Flying Corps pilot who was apparently shot down and killed. However, his mother refused to announce him dead, stating that she knew he was alive. She also takes the case of a 13-year-old girl being set up for a murder who didn't talk to anyone else except Maisie, since Maisie was able to use her psychology background to find a way to get the girl, Avril Jarvis, to talk. The Maisie Dobbs Series deals with many of the common problems people dealt with after World War I ended, including the struggle to grieve for loved ones who died in the war because they never knew what happened to them, drug addiction caused by attempts to manage pain from war wounds, struggling to fall in love with someone else after losing your "sweetheart" in the war, and the economic depression.
The water was thought to be a single tear of Yaqub (Jacob) and had marvelous healing properties. As "Meiron water", it was exported to many countries. Çelebi identified the Jewish festival as the Feast of the Tabernacles, which his translator Stephen judged to be a "pardonable mistake" for Lag be-Omer. A map from Napoleon's invasion of 1799 by Pierre Jacotin showed the place, named as "Merou".Karmon, 1960, p. 166. Note 15: the area north of Safad was not surveyed by Jacotin, but drawn based on an existing map of d'Anville. Meiron suffered relatively minor damage in the Galilee earthquake of 1837. It was reported that during the earthquake the walls of the tombs of Rabbi Eleazer and Rabbi She-Maun were dislodged, but did not collapse.Neman, 1971, cited in "The earthquake of 1 January 1837 in Southern Lebanon and Northern Israel" by N. N. Ambraseys, in Annali di Geofisica, Aug. 1997, p.

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