How to Use unprincipled in a Sentence
unprincipled
adjective-
Trump, an unruly, unprincipled leader, must find them and hold them close.
— Logan Jenkins, sandiegouniontribune.com, 25 May 2017 -
The show is about those things, but The Morning Show’s attempts to tell stories about them, and the characters themselves, reach for a numb, unprincipled emptiness.
— Kathryn Vanarendonk, Vulture, 18 Sep. 2021 -
The real Mitchell was an unprincipled, profane creep, and Doman digs into all of that with relish.
— Chris Hewitt, Star Tribune, 15 Oct. 2020 -
Too afraid to be seen as taking sides, consumer brands risk being seen as boring (best case) or even unprincipled (worst case) by conscious consumers.
— Patricia Nakache, Fortune, 1 Mar. 2018 -
The exceptional 1989 film Glory revealed that black men had fought for the Union—yet white Union soldiers were still mostly portrayed as unprincipled foils.
— Glenn David Brasher, Smithsonian, 19 Apr. 2017 -
The exceptional 1989 film Glory revealed that black men had fought for the Union—yet white Union soldiers were still mostly portrayed as unprincipled foils.
— Glenn David Brasher, Smithsonian, 19 Apr. 2017 -
For most people, the news that McConnell is being unprincipled will be roughly as surprising as the news that professional wrestling is staged.
— Timothy Noah, The New Republic, 22 Sep. 2020 -
In Panama an unprincipled spy enlists a tailor to gather information about the canal for the British government, but the details soon become lies.
— Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2019 -
The principled stance taken by the Baptists had mostly helped the unprincipled bootleggers.
— Robert Paarlberg, Wired, 11 Aug. 2020 -
If the field on which a powerful company plays the game of engagement is an unprincipled devotion to progress that is measured by quarterly earnings, then yes.
— Curt Steinhorst, Forbes, 22 Oct. 2021 -
For Iannucci, who loves to mock the craven, unprincipled pursuit of power, the scenario is an antic delight and plays to his talent for hectic plot turns and (pardon the expression) rapid-fire dialogue.
— Gary Thompson, Philly.com, 21 Mar. 2018 -
It’s the brazen acknowledgment of this reality that makes the whole enterprise so unprincipled.
— Gerard Baker, WSJ, 4 Jan. 2021 -
The link between these technologies and the fall in revenues led them to characterize music fans as unprincipled thieves obsessed with getting everything for free.
— Rebecca Giblin Cory Doctorow, WIRED, 4 Oct. 2022 -
The two eventually endorsed $2,000 but looked unprincipled in doing so.
— The Editorial Board, WSJ, 4 Mar. 2021 -
Sam’s unprincipled pursuit of her confused principles gives the novel a loopy energy.
— Alexandra Schwartz, The New Yorker, 9 Aug. 2021 -
For over a decade, low interest rates and easy access to capital fueled a period of unprincipled growth in Silicon Valley.
— Shubha Nabar, Forbes, 4 Aug. 2022 -
Of course, prudent judgments can descend into unprincipled ones.
— Adam J. White, WSJ, 30 Nov. 2018 -
Some who behaved impeccably on that sad day, like Pence, have now retreated into the fog of amnesia mixed with unprincipled party loyalty.
— Walter Shapiro, The New Republic, 28 June 2022 -
Puzzle piece by piece, interview by interview, Mr. Wardle fits together a grim story of hubristic doctors and their grotesquely unprincipled enablers who played with human lives in the name of science.
— New York Times, 27 June 2018 -
Georgians can send a clear message that voters will reward honest leadership and reject unprincipled politicians.
— Larry Hogan, WSJ, 23 May 2022 -
If this policy of unprincipled engagement continues, the United States stands to lose the future to today’s Communist superpower.
— Michael McCaul, National Review, 1 Oct. 2020 -
Some of those efforts may be mere unprincipled emotional reactions; others may proceed from principles worthy of profound respect.
— Joshua Prager, CNN, 23 Sep. 2021 -
Donald Trump is an ambitious, unprincipled, unpopular man who took advantage of unique circumstances to occupy the Oval Office.
— David French, National Review, 12 Sep. 2017 -
Americans are generally proud of their free speech tradition, and many argue that the European approach is unprincipled or ineffective.
— Mila Versteeg, The Atlantic, 19 Aug. 2017 -
Critics see a tangle of unprincipled hypocrisies—intellectual ground cover for banal shamelessness and techy self-interest.
— Anna Wiener, The New Yorker, 27 Oct. 2021 -
House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerrold Nadler said the pardon was undeserved and unprincipled.
— Democrat-Gazette Staff From Wire Reports, Arkansas Online, 26 Nov. 2020 -
As obviously silly and unprincipled as these objections were, they were nevertheless treated as sincere.
— Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 30 Mar. 2020 -
The retirement of Justice Anthony M. Kennedy gives one of the worst, most unprincipled presidents in history the opportunity to cement the justices’ conservative majority for a generation.
— Paul Thornton, latimes.com, 30 June 2018 -
Detractors call Johnson buffoonish and unprincipled, reckless and feckless.
— Christina Boyle, Los Angeles Times, 22 July 2019 -
Accum framed the problems in starkly moralistic terms: nefarious, mercenary, criminal, unprincipled, fraudulent, and evil.
— Benjamin R. Cohen, Wired, 8 Oct. 2020
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unprincipled.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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