there was an inoffensive article in the newspaper that the man loved.
You don't, because there is no such word. Perhaps you are thinking of "inoffensive," which is the opposite of "offensive." Something that is "offensive" offends (bothers, upsets, annoys) other people. The racist remarks made by the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers were considered so offensive that people demanded that he resign. As for "inoffensive," you use it like this: The comedian sometimes was very sarcastic, but his jokes were generally inoffensive, so nobody complained about him.
The word inoffensive is an adjective. It describes something that is not offensive.
Benign (harmless, inoffensive) is an adjective, not an adverb. A sentence using the adverb, benignly. "He smiled benignly at the bullies, knowing that he would have his revenge on them in a few hours."
since eviscrerate means to remove you could say: A compromise that eviscerated the bill. or The censors eviscerated the book to make it inoffensive. or To eviscerate an organ from a patient, you will need patience and lots of training.
Inoffensive means not likely to offend or upset someone. It describes something that is not provocative, harmful, or controversial.
lemon shark
There are several, including polite, civil, and inoffensive.
unpleasant
The correct spelling is benign (harmless, or inoffensive).
This unusual combination, being simply an adjective and a noun, is grammatically inoffensive, but whether it means anything is not certain.
meek mild boring. Also humourless uninteresting unexciting.
The word euphamism refers to the use of an offensive term in substitution of one that is inoffensive such as "passed away" which is considered inoffensive compared to "died" which can be offensive.