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Unobjectionable   Listen
Unobjectionable

adjective
1.
(of behavior or especially language) free from objectionable elements; fit for all observers.  Synonym: clean.  "A clean joke"
2.
Not causing disapproval.  Synonym: innocuous.  "Confined himself to innocuous generalities" , "Unobjectionable behavior"
3.
Not objectionable.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Unobjectionable" Quotes from Famous Books



... persons, Billy Stitts by name, was fairly unobjectionable as a human being, since he was a quaint, slow-witted, bird-like little creature, fully sixty years of age and clearly harmless. The others were as frankly in pursuit of a mate as any two ...
— The Furnace of Gold • Philip Verrill Mighels

... done more than dream of it, archdeacon. As regards the match itself, it would, I think, be unobjectionable. Lord Lufton will not be a very rich man, but his property is respectable, and as far as I can learn his character is on the whole good. If they like each other, I should be contented with such a marriage. ...
— Framley Parsonage • Anthony Trollope

... Uncle Titus this, after she had been with him a month, and had thought it over; and Uncle Titus agreed, quite as if it were no real concern of his, but a very proper and unobjectionable plan for her, ...
— Real Folks • Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney

... last session will be past. I am well aware that in former years objectionable measures have been proposed in reference to the encouragement of American shipping; but it seems to me that the proposed measure is as nearly unobjectionable as any can be. It will of course benefit primarily our seaboard States, such as Maine, Louisiana, and Washington; but what benefits part of our people in the end benefits all; just as Government aid to irrigation and forestry in the West is really of benefit, not only to the Rocky ...
— State of the Union Addresses of Theodore Roosevelt • Theodore Roosevelt

... at all"; "I saw no one at all"; "If he had any desire at all to see me, he would come where I am." The at all in sentences like these is superfluous. Yet there are instances in which the phrase is certainly a very convenient one, and seems to be unobjectionable. It is much used, and ...
— The Verbalist • Thomas Embly Osmun, (AKA Alfred Ayres)


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