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  1. Dictionary
    unconscionable
    /ˌʌnˈkɒnʃənəbl/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. To make people feel shame or guilt for being ill is unconscionable. This unconscionable policy will cause great suffering. mainly UK. unacceptably great in amount: After waiting for an unconscionable amount of time, we were told to come back later. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of UNCONSCIONABLE is shockingly unfair or unjust. How to use unconscionable in a sentence. When Do You Use unconscionable?

  4. Something that is almost unimaginably unacceptable is unconscionable. Think of it as being something that no reasonable person would even think of doing or saying — something unbelievable, outrageous, and often horrible. The word unconscionable is related to the word conscience.

  5. Unconscionable definition: not guided by conscience; unscrupulous. . See examples of UNCONSCIONABLE used in a sentence.

  6. To make people feel shame or guilt for being sick is unconscionable. This unconscionable policy will cause great suffering. mainly UK. unacceptably great in amount: After waiting for an unconscionable amount of time, we were told to come back later. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  7. If you describe something as unconscionable, you mean that the person responsible for it ought to be ashamed of it, especially because its effects are so great or severe. [ literary ] ... speech that it would be unconscionable for a democratic society to suppress.

  8. Synonyms for UNCONSCIONABLE: excessive, extreme, insane, steep, extravagant, intolerable, endless, infinite; Antonyms of UNCONSCIONABLE: reasonable, inadequate, moderate, insufficient, modest, deficient, minimum, minimal