Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "An unjust act ", 9 letters:
injustice

Alternative clues for the word injustice

Word definitions for injustice in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Injustice is a five-part British drama television series about criminal barrister William Travers, who has lost faith in the legal system following a traumatic series of events. The one-hour drama premiered on 6 June 2011 on ITV . The series was released ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 absence of justice; unjustice. 2 violation of the rights of another person. 3 unfairness; the state of not being fair or just.

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Injustice \In*jus"tice\, n. [F. injustice, L. injustitia. See In- not, and Justice , and cf. Unjust .] Lack of justice and equity; violation of the rights of another or others; iniquity; wrong; unfairness; imposition. If this people [the Athenians] resembled ...

Usage examples of injustice.

Russell, of The Scotsman, fulminated against the injustice of refusing a lease to the foremost agriculturist in Scotland--and when you say that you may say of the United Kingdom--because the tenant held certain political opinions and had the courage to express them.

A Socialist movement which can swing the mass of the people behind it, drive the pro-Fascists out of positions of control, wipe out the grosser injustices and let the working class see that they have something to fight for, win over the middle classes instead of antagonizing them, produce a workable imperial policy instead of a mixture of humbug and Utopianism, bring patriotism and intelligence into partnership -- for the first time, a movement of such a kind becomes possible.

Therefore without any injustice rulers can have the children of Jews baptized, as well as those of other slaves who are unbelievers.

Pro-democracy Iranian bloggers joined their Western sympathizers to express their anger at the injustice.

As before, Boyo and Silvereye spoke loudly of injustices done and the need for retribution, but theirs were not the only voices raised.

She had predicted that I would not remain in the military profession, and when I told her that I had made up my mind to give it up, because I could not be reconciled to the injustice I had experienced, she burst out laughing.

I should have required a patience to which I could not lay any claim, as every kind of injustice was revolting to me, and as I could not bear to feel myself dependent.

And although in my own nature I am exempt from liability to birth or death, and am Lord of all created things, yet as often as in the world virtue is enfeebled, and vice and injustice prevail, so often do I become manifest and am revealed from age to age, to save the just, to destroy the guilty, and to reassure the faltering steps of virtue.

He had seen through the maternal precautions the last time he was at home, and talking with Cupples about it, who secretly wished for no better luck than that Alec should fall in love with Annie, had his feelings strengthened as to the unkindness, if not injustice, of throwing her periodically into such a dungeon as the society of the Bruces.

Then he would become filled with envy, deeming himself a victim of injustice, being denied the graces given to all other things.

Under other circumstances, they might have ignored these malcontents, who had so far limited themselves to spreading scurrilous rumors, telling stories of injustices at the hands of the patrol, attacking and temporarily disabling a few patrol members under the cover of darkness, protecting wrongdoers, and defacing tunnels and buildings with mocking graffiti.

Ritz and Edi, seemed to her a degrading of their names and an injustice to her favorites.

In this respect she had done injustice to his mind, which had been kept in subjection and deprived of its ordinary strength and courage, by the enfeebling fondness of his heart.

I related the whole affair to the bishop, exaggerating the uproar, making much of the injustice of such proceedings, and railing at a vexatious police daring to molest travellers and to insult the sacred rights of individuals and nations.

Isabel was meek, and her pride was concealed by the outward softness and feminacy of her temper: but she stole away from those who had wounded her heart or trampled upon its feelings, and nourished with secret but passionate tears the memory of the harshness or injustice she had endured.