Cardinal in a sentence as a noun

Force and fraud are in war the two cardinal virtues.

Taking too long to get to the point is a cardinal sin in writing and it's kinda lame to just label it as "haters gonna hate".

One of the cardinal rules of software development is to ask your market what their pain points are, but come up with the solutions on your own.

He's no saint, but is commonly dismissed due to committing the cardinal sin of pointing out truths make people uncomfortable.

I was thinking a non-disappearing modal on a mobile browser would be a fairly cardinal UX mistake.

Cardinal in a sentence as an adjective

> Google+ embodied the Internet's cardinal sin: It broke everything it touchedI think this is the most important single line of the piece.

"Actually, one of the cardinal rules of literary criticism is that you should not attempt to psychoanalyze the author of a work; rather, you should treat the work as a self-contained unit.

Peirce figured out electrical gates could be used to implement boolean logic 50 years before Shannon, axiomatised the natural numbers before Peano, made the distinction of cardinal and ordinal before Cantor & nobody knows who he ******* was because he was a chemist.

As one of the most eminent economists of education has written, "The education system is a formalised, bureaucratic organisational structure and, like any bureaucratic organisational structure, it strives for maximum autonomy from external pressures as its cardinal principle of survival.

Cardinal definitions

noun

(Roman Catholic Church) one of a group of more than 100 prominent bishops in the Sacred College who advise the Pope and elect new Popes

noun

the number of elements in a mathematical set; denotes a quantity but not the order

noun

a variable color averaging a vivid red

See also: carmine

noun

crested thick-billed North American finch having bright red plumage in the male

See also: redbird

adjective

serving as an essential component; "a cardinal rule"; "the central cause of the problem"; "an example that was fundamental to the argument"; "computers are fundamental to modern industrial structure"

See also: central fundamental primal

adjective

being or denoting a numerical quantity but not order; "cardinal numbers"