Miss Hannigan, the unscrupulous head of the orphanage, plotted with her brother to claim the reward for finding Annie's parents.
definition: devoid of moral concerns (having no moral principles)synonyms: unprincipled, immoral, ammoral, unethical, dishonorableantonyms: moral, honest, honorable, ethicalIn a sentence: Miss Hannigan, the unscrupulous head of the orphanage, plotted with her brother to claim the reward for finding Annie's parents.
Rogue.
If someone calls you a cad, they are saying that you behave in a dishonorable or dishonest way, especially in your relationships with others. It implies that you are unscrupulous or lacking in morals.
The word "victim" is not typically capitalized in a sentence unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
You may be able to get a prison sentence reduced through actions such as good behavior, participating in rehabilitative programs, or providing information on criminal activities. You can also appeal your sentence or seek sentence reduction through a plea bargain or sentence modification.
The mayor was forced to resign because of his unscrupulous business dealings.
Unscrupulous means unprincipled. Synonyms of unscrupulous include dishonest and scandalous. "The unscrupulous Hollywood agent would lie to everyone and falsify information in order to get his clients the best deals possible."
(unscrupulous = devoid of scruples, unaware or uncaring whether one's actions are right or honorable) Example : "If there weren't so many unscrupulous people, we wouldn't need so many rules and laws."
Unscrupulous is an adjective which means immoral. Thus, it can be used in the following sentences: The politician was so unscrupulous that he lied about his opponent to get elected. There are a lot of unscrupulous policemen at the borders who take bribes in order to let drugs in. I've never heard someone be as unscrupulous as the factory owner who lied and said his cars were safe when they weren't.
If you think or feel she's unscrupulous, you're probably right.
definition: devoid of moral concerns (having no moral principles)synonyms: unprincipled, immoral, ammoral, unethical, dishonorableantonyms: moral, honest, honorable, ethicalIn a sentence: Miss Hannigan, the unscrupulous head of the orphanage, plotted with her brother to claim the reward for finding Annie's parents.
Unscrupulous.. APEX ;D
The word "unscrupulous" does not appear in J.D. Salinger's novel "The Catcher in the Rye."
You may be going for 'misrepresentation'. Someone may say something without perfect use of words or grammar, and an unscrupulous person may twist the sentence around, giving it another meaning.
The relationship between "verbose" and "concise" is one of excessiveness versus brevity. In the same vein, the relationship between "unscrupulous" and its counterpart would be one of lacking morals or principles versus having morals or principles. Therefore, the opposite of "unscrupulous" would be "scrupulous," which means being principled or ethical.
Cooped with this, unscrupulous,
knave