Irredeemable in a sentence as an adjective

9 out of 10 times the person using it is an irredeemable *******.

Gl/maps/q8WpU These places are not places, they are irredeemable ruins of the 20th century. No transit system will ever work there.

When legislators voted for these three strikes laws, with public support, they were thinking of people who are "irredeemable." Hardened convicts who end up in jail on three occasions.

Well opinions vary, but to suggest that breaking the law is in itself an immoral and irredeemable act, is naive.

The self-righteous anger about the irredeemable horror of the new Gmail compose is starting to get a bit old. First of all, it's not as one-sided as people are making it out.

Most important, the collapse in stock values made irredeemable the position of the employee who had embezzled to play the market. He now confessed.

"Stop exploding fireworks on my front door you irredeemable kids! I don't care if it is your yearly festival of annoying neighbors into threatening you with axes!"

To the community, someone who get 18 years for a crime must be a truly irredeemable person, right? To the imprisoned, a society that punishes him so harshly cannot be something that will welcome him back, right?

The former was otherwise a nice guy, though I found his hobby extremely distasteful; the latter was an irredeemable arsehole.

They said that if I was leaving then the place must be irredeemable and so they were moving on as well. It left me feeling profoundly conflicted because while I had given up on the company by that point I had never intended to cause others to leave.

How far down the rabbit hole do we go, and how much of my irredeemable nerdiness am I willing to admit to? If we're talking Z-Day, then the most economical solution seems to be either to buy and convert an old mine, or to grab an old nuclear silo[1].

Looks like this comment of mine was irrevocably wrong and completely irredeemable. No apology is possible and I'm sorry for my very existence.

Wow. What utter, irredeemable hypocrisy." It's not legitimate for HN to grieve" is met by indignation at being told how we should feel, and then you have the unmitigated gall to declare in opposition that others don't have to feel the same way we do?

The origin of evil is either irredeemable people or irredeemable ideologies. They cannot be reasoned with and do not have internal logic.

Any other use case becomes an irredeemable mess, substantially limiting the attractiveness for residents. Transportation has, and is, and will continue to be, the Achille's Heel of San Francisco and its surroundings.

But I've definitely heard friends in various non-dominant groups tell stories about the racist, sexist, or anti-gay bias they've listened to politely because they liked their jobs more than they liked being honest about the fact that they thought their co-workers were irredeemable assholes. No way to tell, really.

There is no excuse for this behavior, and calling the victims of unprovoked violence "unprincipled" is absolutely irredeemable.

After a few decades of ******** excuses from irredeemable idiots, I would also end up in the "**** you, pay me" category. Because nothing short of being as inevitable as death would be enough to get inveterate weasels to actually pay, and nobody wants to be jerked around by weasels.

After reading what keeps coming out the industry at this moment, going to the forums, working with people in it, I have no doubt that they aren't evil by individuals, but irredeemable in aggregate. Here - Information is power and what not: Annotated guide by the NYT covering the Order Instituting Proceedings.

Once someone claims that, for example, the US government is the modern analogue to the Nazis and they'll come for you soon, dear hacker, the way they came for the Jews then they're saying that, as far as they're concerned, anyone who would suffer further debate about the issue is defending an absolute and irredeemable evil. Or they're just engaging in paranoid, thoughtless hyperbole.

Irredeemable definitions

adjective

insusceptible of reform; "vicious irreclaimable boys"; "irredeemable sinners"

See also: irreclaimable unredeemable unreformable

adjective

(of paper money) not convertible into coin at the pleasure of the holder