Truthful in a sentence as an adjective

None of your points are coherent or truthful. This seems common among people that run to Node and Mongo.

They are mentally not in the state to receive any "truthful speech". They are in a new chapter of their lives and the only bet is to give it a try.

I pressed him; "are you being truthful with me?" He indicated that he was, and I believe him because I've known him for the better part of my adult life.

I think, going forward, I am just going to keep thinking about being truthful, keep my ethics high, and work with people who are the same. I'll sleep easy at night as a result.

And yet his lawyer could have written a truthful denial that they'd given the govt "direct access to the server". See how that works?

The only truthful answer was "That is impossible to say." Before you even get to that point though you get into "the system."

The supposed slight is only the truthful announcement of a criminal act by the government in question. 5.

This might be one of the rare cases where "you'll understand when you're older" is the most elegant and truthful response available. But I'll understand if that's not very satisfying, so...

I don't want to jump to conclusions, but reading both sides of the story you guys don't come over as entirely truthful in this sordid affair.

It's natural that any IPO will try to disclose as little as possible and try to be as positive as possible while stil being truthful and accurate. Personally I may think of buying in if its gets down to $10-12.

I still don't know how truthful that was, but eventually I left to try and start something that will actually benefit people, not just redistribute things and make money. I wonder now if I was on a slippery ***** and got off at just the right moment.

Calling what happened the other day a "maintenance window" is about as truthful as describing a fire that burns your house as down as a "redecorating party".

In the past, the community at large either would have been truthful or simply not responded. Now, a significant portion of the community is responding non-truthfully.

The Instapaper error message should at least be more truthful, or the opt-out list made public so you know restrictions before purchasing the application.

There have been stories of police officers being less than truthful in how a stop occurred, video makes that harder. There is also the infamous 'resisting arrest' charge which people of various demographics feel is used when profiling to hassle them.

Suppose EJ and AirBnB are both being truthful. Neither disputes that the house-trashing occurred, there's been some contact between AirBnB, and apparently at least partial assistance in finding accommodations, etc.

Instead of leaving because the company is a sinking ship, think of a diplomatic, but still truthful, reason for exiting. For example, focus on what you are going to do next, and supply that as the reason: "I'm much more interested in working on this kind of technology/product/etc.

And what are we to do when their bluffs are revealed to be truthful, and the NSA's sway over all levels of government to be absolute? What if we were to learn that the Constitution is simply a feeble veneer meant to conceal the fact that there is certain legislation we're powerless to exert pressure over?

One week later, after another leak - "Oh, we were just being the most truthful, or "least untruthful" as we could when we said that." It completely destroys the credibility of the government, and it should, because they're lying about it at every turn, or at the very least twisting words to appear that they say one thing, but they mean another.

I'd be interested in hearing NYT's response to this - they previously stated unconditionally that they stand by Broder's review and believe it to be honest, truthful, and factual. If indeed at the end of the day this was Broder pushing his own agenda, not only ignoring but outright faking facts, then I think his journalistic career should be over.

The idea that you can stick the words "under penalty of perjury" on a random form to create a legal requirement for truthful answers is one of those Internet legal old-wives-tales, like adding "no copyright intended" to a Youtube upload. However, if you report that someone else is dead, and they or their family suffer harm as a result, you can probably be sued easily, regardless of whether you use Facebook to make the report, or a carrier pigeon.

Truthful definitions

adjective

expressing or given to expressing the truth; "a true statement"; "gave truthful testimony"; "a truthful person"

See also: true

adjective

conforming to truth; "I wouldn't have told you this if it weren't so"; "a truthful statement"