Lacking vs Unconscionable - What's the difference?
lacking | unconscionable |
The absence of something; a lack.
* Sax Rohmer, The Romance of Sorcery
Not conscionable; unscrupulous and lacking principles or conscience.
* 2001 , , Middle Age: A Romance (Fourth Estate, paperback edition, p364)
Excessive, imprudent or unreasonable.
As a verb lacking
is .As a noun lacking
is the absence of something; a lack.As a adjective unconscionable is
not conscionable; unscrupulous and lacking principles or conscience.lacking
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)- Cagliostro, however, whatever his moral lackings , did not lack spirit; he was not the man to succumb to this kind of coercion.
Anagrams
*unconscionable
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- When Roger assured him that prospects "looked very good" for a retrial, even a reversal of the verdict, since Roger had discovered "unconscionable errors" in the trial, Jackson grunted in bemusement and smiled with half his mouth.
- The effective rate of interest was unconscionable , but not legally usurious.