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Answer for the clue "Unwillingness to tell lies ", 8 letters:
veracity

Alternative clues for the word veracity

Word definitions for veracity in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. unwillingness to tell lies [ant: mendacity ]

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context uncountable English) truthfulness 2 (context countable English) Something that is true 3 (context uncountable English) accuracy or precision 4 act of being exact and accurate. 5 correctness and carefulness in one's plan of action.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Veracity may refer to: Veracity (ethics) , an ethical principle Veracity (Mark Lavorato novel) , a 2007 dystopian fiction novel Veracity (Laura Bynum novel) , a 2010 literature/speculative fiction novel Veracity (album) , a 2008 album by hardcore/metal ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Veracity \Ve*rac"i*ty\, n. [Cf. F. v['e]racit['e].] The quality or state of being veracious; habitual observance of truth; truthfulness; truth; as, a man of veracity.

Usage examples of veracity.

On the other hand, if one or both were skillful enough to feign the biomarkers of veracity while lying, that is exactly what I would expect to detect.

Further proof could scarcely be needed, but Baschet has done more than prove the authenticity, he has proved the extraordinary veracity, of the Memoirs.

Valmarana, who told me that, if he had been aware that the sanitary line could be eluded, he would never have impugned my veracity, and thanked me for the information I had given him.

Syderstone, in the county of Norfolk, do hereby certify that Elizabeth Parsons, Thomas Mase, William Ofield, Elizabeth Hooks, Phoebe Steward, and Robert Hunter, who are now residing in this parish, and whose Declarations are hereto annexed, have been known to us for some years, and are persons of veracity and good repute.

Court of Oyer and Terminer, once Nathaniel Saltonstall left the court, doubted the veracity of the confessors.

Count Wala, cousin of Charlemagne, and grandson of Charles Martel, was a prisoner in its dungeon in 830 for uttering some words too true for an age unaccustomed to the perpetual veracity of our newspapers.

Because Marconi had never made a statement or a claim he had not been able to prove, he had attained a reputation for veracity which made his statement that he had received a signal across the Atlantic carry weight with the scientists.

His defence was feeble: and he contented himself with protesting, that he never had entertained any design against the life of the king: his veracity would not allow him to deny the conspiracy for an insurrection.

Standing there unperverted, man has an invincible reliance on the veracity of his faculties and the normal reports of nature.

Upon this the poor fellow immediately expressed so much alacrity, that Jones was perfectly satisfied with his veracity, and began now to entertain sentiments of compassion for him.

Judge Douglas did not make his statement upon that occasion as matters that he believed to be true, but he stated them roundly as being true, in such form as to pledge his veracity for their truth.

Moral Qualities, in mass, that have been distributed, a single distinguishing characteristic at a time, among the nonspeaking animal world -- courage, cowardice, ferocity, gentleness, fairness, justice, cunning, treachery, magnanimity, cruelty, malice, malignity, lust, mercy, pity, purity, selfishness, sweetness, honor, love, hate, baseness, nobility, loyalty, falsity, veracity, untruthfulness -- each human being shall have all of these in him, and they will constitute his nature.

In any young writer, would not such offences against veracity invite the severest condemnation?

Freedom of Speculation Act, credible sociohistorical data on the origins and evolution of Les Assassins des Fauteuils Rollents from obscure, adolescent, nihilistic Root Cult to one of the most feared cells in the annals of Canadian extremism was regrettably patchy and dependent on the hearsay of sources whose scholarly veracity was of an integrity somewhat less than unimpeachable.

Their judgment, I believe, will be in favour of my veracity, and, indeed, why should I not be veracious?