What's the difference between unexceptionable and unimpeachable?

Unexceptionable


Definition:

  • (a.) Not liable to any exception or objection; unobjectionable; faultless; good; excellent; as, a man of most unexceptionable character.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Nearly half of the operations were performed in modern theatres with satisfactory ventilation and unexceptionable arrangements for the sterilization of instruments and dressings.Skin sterilization was often carried out perfunctorily or with agents with poor sporicidal activity.
  • (2) In most other respects, though, his foreign policy is blandly unexceptionable.
  • (3) Many of the draft constitution's 236 articles are bland and unexceptionable, but there is bitter disagreement about the role of Islam and clerical scholars, the definition of family values and the position of the military – all key issues in the messy transition to a post-Mubarak era.

Unimpeachable


Definition:

  • (a.) Not impeachable; not to be called in question; exempt from liability to accusation; free from stain, guilt, or fault; irreproachable; blameless; as, an unimpeachable reputation; unimpeachable testimony.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Saleh Abdeslam may be a terrorist, but his trial must be unimpeachable | Mary Dejevsky Read more He is fighting extradition to France, but could be surrendered to Paris under the terms of a European arrest warrant.
  • (2) They were of questionable vintage but against a backdrop of spongy-white plaster and dark wood beams, their buccaneering credentials appeared unimpeachable.
  • (3) I’ve never done anything extraordinary,” says Finch in one of several brazen acts of self-exposition, “I think that’s why I play video games, ’cos they’re more interesting than my real life.” The words ring especially hollow when spoken by Gervais, whose limited emotional range and rising celebrity profile have transformed him into a sort of modern-day Hugh Grant (stay with me) whose audience appeal is apparently so unimpeachable that his flat presence – much less his incongruous Englishness – is considered no obstacle.
  • (4) U Htin Kyaw, just nominated by the NLD for president, is a stellar choice, well-respected, unimpeachable integrity, and a very nice man,” tweeted Thant Myint-U, a historian and the grandson of the former UN secretary general U Thant.
  • (5) He has somehow managed to seem wildly out of step with prevalent trends, even as his classic albums became an unimpeachable touchstone for a variety of new artists.
  • (6) Eyebrows were raised when Sisi decided to allow Islamists to enter the Egyptian military's officer training academy — when it had always insisted before that cadets were unimpeachably apolitical.
  • (7) Clement Attlee, Stafford Cripps, Ernest Bevin – these were political giants, men of unimpeachable integrity and manifestly driven by a high sense of duty.
  • (8) The OBR, headed by Sir Alan Budd – a top-class economist with an unimpeachable record of public service – is designed to prevent chancellors from tweaking Treasury forecasts in order to justify tax and spending decisions.
  • (9) He said he would create a method of verification by an "unimpeachable, impartial" individual or body that would certify that the new press regulator was compliant with Leveson in all respects.
  • (10) First up is his proposal to sell advertising space to corporations , which wouldn't in any way compromise the impartiality and unimpeachable integrity of Hertfordshire constabulary.
  • (11) Steven Spielberg's movie about Lincoln's constitutional dark night of the soul in the civil war – a choice to end slavery or end the bloodshed – leads the field with 12 Oscar nominations and offers Academy voters something reassuringly mainstream and essentially, unimpeachably patriotic.
  • (12) They may even oppose Corbyn on the unimpeachably anti-Tory grounds that he is guaranteeing a decade of Tory rule.
  • (13) Mr Heydon’s conduct has been unimpeachable,” Brandis told Sky News on Sunday.
  • (14) Sade, for instance, is relentlessly obscene, while Sacher-Masoch is unimpeachable.
  • (15) Not one Liberal Democrat MP has sought to follow David Davis and become an unimpeachable defender of civil liberties.
  • (16) In times of national crises,” Hetherington and Nelson wrote , “Americans rally to the president as the anthropomorphic symbol of national unity – a kind of living flag.” In some ways, our national nightmare would be a Trump dream: a period where his acclaim is absolute and unimpeachable.
  • (17) Leading the BBC – a job that mixes business with politics like no other – requires unimpeachable credentials, so Fairhead's candidature put her immediately under scrutiny.
  • (18) Rolling Stone described her new studio album, Soldier of Love, as "unimpeachably excellent" while Billboard said: "It's been 10 years since Sade released an album, but be forewarned – the giant has awoken."
  • (19) But his lesson, that if you wish to promote public austerity then the message comes best from someone of unimpeachable personal frugality, has been lost on David Cameron.
  • (20) The below is according to Marca, so must, of course, be of unimpeachable truth.

Words possibly related to "unexceptionable"

Words possibly related to "unimpeachable"