Unfailing in a sentence as an adjective

The difference between a good and an evil person isn't that the good person is perfect or unfailing. The difference is that good person hasn't stopped trying to be good.

Com - with its unfailing focus on photographers and their photography - ran past Flickr long ago.

My bank has treated me with unfailing honesty the last seven years and never once tried to take advantage of me. The apartment management company...

So, if people have an unfailing sense of good and bad software, which they might not, it would be eventually consistent at best. You're also right that individual talent is, for the most part, impossible to measure.

Quite apart from his obvious technical chops, I've always been impressed by Jon Skeet's unfailing politeness and helpfulness. He's a real role model to developers.

And the unfailing hypocrisy. I distinctly remember Jobs saying "Good artists copy, great artists steal" [1].

I care about the project and therefore I do not assume that I am unfailing perfection of never making mistake or never skipping a step.

> rather you need continuous, unfailing competency That's called doing it manually. What you're doing is making excuses rather than holding yourself to a higher level of quality.

Courts are, apparently, the only unfailing entities that can tell right from wrong. Even when something is universally agreed to be wrong, you are supposed to ignore it lest you feel tempted or required to then make decisions in more nuanced cases.

The author's anger sounds empty without answers to critical questions and his unfailing belief in the free market makes me wonder if he ever ventured anywhere at all.

It's probably fair to say that Apple hasn't ever done anything this bad - but it's also disingenuous to hold them up as an unfailing bastion of niceness and competence.

Prior generations were wrong about almost everything they believed, but this does not stop our unfailing confidence that we, being so much more enlightened, have things for the most part figured out."

The unfailing memory of the Internet, combined with anonymity and its massive reach, creates an echo chamber that can reinforce false information long after the truth has been revealed.

One of Apple's defining characteristics as a business has been its unfailing disinterest in market share in and of itself. So why on Earth would anyone assume that an expansion of a legal mess started in the larger markets, into the smaller ones, is driven by a sudden intense concern about market share?

These efforts have resulted a general expectation among consumers of unfailing reliability and service life measured in decades. The issues they're experiencing with drive units are troubling but acceptable for most owners who know they bought a bleeding-edge testbed for future technology.

Um, because they also were proto-socialist, had better healthcare and hygiene than Europe of the time, and had social norms stressing unfailing politeness? I mean, it’s true their morals seem alien and inhuman to us, but that doesn’t actually make them bad people as such, and I certainly wouldn’t reduce the whole of Mesoamerican civilization to ‘those nasty guys who sacrificed people’.

Because of their liberal belief in the unfailing progresss of the world through tolerance and reason, these middle-class democrats honestly thought that with small concessions and gradual improvements they were furthering the welfare of all subjects in the best way possible. But they had completely forgotten that they represented only fifty or a hundred thousand well-situated opeople in the large cities, and not the hundreds of thousands and millions of the entire country.

Unfailing definitions

adjective

not liable to failure; "a foolproof identification system"; "the unfailing sign of an amateur"; "an unfailing test"

See also: foolproof

adjective

always able to supply more; "an unfailing source of good stories"; "a subject of unfailing interest"

adjective

unceasing; "unfailing loyalty"; "unfailing good spirits"; "unflagging courtesy"

See also: unflagging