incondonable
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From in- + condonable.
Adjective
[edit]incondonable (comparative more incondonable, superlative most incondonable)
- (rare) That can not be condoned; unpardonable; unacceptable.
- 2010, Quleen Kaur Bijral, Ripples Of Mind, lulu.com, page 30
- Are you justified to reproach him in public even if he hasn't crossed any incondonable limit, just committed a petty folly?
- 1979, Allan Carl Greenberg, Artists and Revolution: Dada and the Bauhaus, Umi Research Press, page 120
- Dadaist reaction against an incondonable reality also meant reaction against all who condoned that reality.
- 1993, Malik Muhammad Saeed, Pakistan Labour Cases - Volume 34 - Issues 7-9, Labor laws and legislation, page 1061
- In the circumstances, the period occupied in preferring appeals to the President and the Prime Minister was not incondonable.
- 1962, G.N. Lawande, The Indian Libertarian - Volume 9 - Issues 19-24, Economic History, page 26
- An increase in non-developmental expenditure at the cost of productive investments represents an incondonable waste and a factor retarding India's economic development.
- 2010, Quleen Kaur Bijral, Ripples Of Mind, lulu.com, page 30