lack+of+integrity
1lack of integrity — index bad repute, dishonesty, improbity Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
2integrity — Uprightness of character and soundness of moral principle; honesty; probity. Crocheron v Babington, 16 Idaho 441, 101 P 741. A married woman s unfaithfulness to her husband and her violation of marital obligations, does not tend to show her lack… …
3integrity — noun 1 quality of being honest and firm in your moral principles ADJECTIVE ▪ great, high ▪ absolute, complete (both esp. BrE) ▪ personal ▪ academic …
4lack — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ profound, serious, severe ▪ conspicuous, distinct, notable, noticeable, obvious, remarkable …
5integrity — [ɪn tɛgrɪti] noun 1》 the quality of having strong moral principles. 2》 the state of being whole. ↘the condition of being unified or sound in construction. ↘internal consistency or lack of corruption in electronic data. Origin ME: from Fr …
6Data integrity — in its broadest meaning refers to the trustworthiness of system resources over their entire life cycle. In more analytic terms, it is the representational faithfulness of information to the true state of the object that the information represents …
7Opportunism — Opportunity Seized, Opportunity Missed. Engraving by Theodoor Galle, 1605. Contents 1 General definition …
8List of Merriam–Webster's Words of the Year — Merriam Webster s Words of the Year, a list published annually by the American dictionary publishing company Merriam Webster, features the ten words of the year from the English language. This list started in 2003, and is published at the end of… …
92006 Thai coup d'état — Thailand This article is part of the series: Politics and government of Thailand …
10dishonesty — I noun bad faith, cheating, chicane, chicanery, corruption, corruptness, cozenage, deceit, deceitfulness, deception, deviation from probity, dishonor, disingenuousness, disposition to deceive, disposition to defraud, disposition ro lie, duplicity …