unsparing

tak tanggung-tanggung
definition
adjective
he is unsparing in his criticism of the arms trade
merciless; severe.
she had won her mother's unsparing approval
given freely and generously.
example
Time and again, in prose 'unsparing' and unsentimental, Liz has allowed readers a peek into her own mental health struggles.
The account of his marital infidelities, especially his affair with Assia Wevill in the early 1960s, is fair-minded and 'unsparing' .
When he writes about himself, Brown is tough and 'unsparing' .
Given what is known now of Lange's state of mind at the time, Richard's only crime was to be 'unsparing' with the truth.
It is a matter of concern not only for parents, teachers and the Executive, but for everyone who values the civil society that generations of Scots created through their 'unsparing' efforts.
Still, the wonder of this novel is Goodman's 'unsparing' depiction of the failings of religion, even as she insists on its power to move and heal.
He accepted no excuses and could be 'unsparing' when mistakes were made.
The book is 'unsparing' in revealing the grimness and horror of war, of the sudden loss of friends, of living under appalling conditions, of ‘trying to do what I could with a tourniquet of webbing on a youngster who had lost a leg’.
But Victorian County Court Judge, Graeme Crossley, was 'unsparing' , describing Hopper's behaviour as a gross breach of trust of the entire Wesley College community.
It is entirely proper that such a major work, with its 'unsparing' criticisms, should provoke a response from within the establishment.
He is 'unsparing' towards the imperfections of all religions, including his own, but remains committed to the path of Buddhism as a way of enlightenment.
He cannot be called that, but through his austerity, bearing, unwavering commitment and 'unsparing' frankness he brought to his times a hint of the prophets of yore.
A huge mass of material has been organised into a clear, coherent narrative; it is well balanced between the serious politics and the intimate detail and is 'unsparing' in its gruesome factual account of what it was like to be there.
Though 'unsparing' in his criticism of political adversaries, the former Chief Minister is adept at employing witty remarks and repartees to cushion the impact of his caustic remarks.
But Avedon went in another direction with his portrait work, shooting 'unsparing' and often unflattering shots of subjects from Marilyn Monroe to Michael Moore.
Self-criticism, cruel, 'unsparing' criticism that goes to the very root of the evil is life and breath for the proletarian movement.
Club chairman Stephen Henry is well aware of the 'unsparing' efforts of all involved in the club.
Gentility is not the hallmark of Snyder's books: They're violent, 'unsparing' and tough on both the reader and the characters.
I'm going to be 'unsparing' here, because I think any escort who works in such an unprincipled manner deserves trouble.
They are 'unsparing' in their criticism of the Socialist Party in its early years, before it broke definitively with a revolutionary orientation.
Lowe is 'unsparing' in the book in her description of her husband - his morning ritual ‘inner cleansing’ that includes spitting and hawking - and his halting English.
While he is 'unsparing' in his descriptions of the muddle, indecision and plain deceit in the preparation and conduct of the rising, he does communicate something of the small-scale grandeur of it all.
Both were 'unsparing' in their criticism of government and of the social organisations that held India in their vice-like grip.
His criticism of religion was 'unsparing' , as was his contempt for those who pinned progressive hopes on it.
He was a great support to this paper, helping to get it going in 1979, serving ever since on its editorial board, and above all contributing many exact, 'unsparing' and funny pieces on poetry, on novels - and on football.
Recriminations will be many, various and, in some quarters, 'unsparing' after flickering hopes of reaching the World Cup play-offs were extinguished by Belarus.
That 'unsparingness' may also begin to account for the fact that the sum of his parts - and of his books - sometimes seems greater than the whole.
They meet in a museum and discuss Goya - an exemplary figure to them both, for an 'unsparingness' that somehow doesn't exclude hope.
He gave of himself 'unsparingly' and unstintingly.
Compassionately but 'unsparingly' portrayed, these women are not especially noble and are capable of a scathing backstreet wit.
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