English to Arabic Dictionary unconscionable

unconscionable

غير معقول
definition
adjective
the unconscionable conduct of his son
not right or reasonable.
translation of 'unconscionable'
adjective
غير معقول,
عديم الضمير,
مفرط
example
The rule has little force in circumstances such as the present where injunctive relief to prevent 'unconscionable' conduct is the only substantive claim I can discern to be available to the appellant.
A corporation must not, in trade or commerce, engage in conduct that is 'unconscionable' within the meaning of the unwritten law - section 51AB.
It alleged that the transaction was 'unconscionable' , inequitable and unreasonable.
The insured person is guilty of 'unconscionable' conduct if he does not provide for the insurer to be recouped out of the damages awarded against the wrongdoer.
At one extreme, I do not categorise it as 'unconscionable' or extortionate: at the other, it is not standard or customary.
The Trade Practices Act is basically about misleading or deceptive conduct, or 'unconscionable' conduct.
They will likely include Kashmiri Peter Qasim, who has been in detention for an 'unconscionable' seven years, as well as the Afghan and Iraqi asylum-seekers whose countries say they cannot, for now, take them back.
The former MBA students said the tuition increase was ‘unfair, unreasonable and 'unconscionable' ,’ and the university failed to consult them.
He's been a very successful campaigner, with moral indignation, about this 'unconscionable' debt bondage that exists in the world today, and he's been a very effective campaigner from the outside.
Although 'unconscionable' conduct in this narrow sense bears some resemblance to the doctrine of undue influence, there is a difference between the two.
Moreover the fundamental principle that equity is concerned to prevent 'unconscionable' conduct permeates all the elements of the doctrine.
I think it's important that Government has the correct laws in place, and say where 'unconscionable' conduct does occur, that action can be taken.
But the Bench refused to stay the proceedings after Jordan had contended he had been prejudiced by undue, 'unconscionable' and inordinate delay since the raid two years ago.
She added: ‘Those who are attempting to impose their own theological perspective instead of applying proven public health practices are playing a deadly game; an 'unconscionable' game.’
It would have been a stranger to the 'unconscionable' conduct.
The obstacles in the way to achieve such benefits, with cleaner fuels, continue to include a compromised political will coupled with 'unconscionable' corporate conduct.
But although both doctrines show equity intervening to prevent 'unconscionable' conduct, the special feature of the mutual wills and secret trust cases is that they involve not two parties but three.
Furthermore, in order to assess the special disability and whether there has been 'unconscionable' conduct, it is essential to also examine the actual actions of those against whom that conduct is impugned.
What the Trade Practices Act does is make 'unconscionable' conduct unacceptable to the law.
The Magistrate found firstly that they had engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct and also 'unconscionable' conduct.
The problem is that the old party is an 'unconscionable' time a-dying, which prompts Kemp to utter outrageous one-liners.
In more recent times the Act has been extended to cover 'unconscionable' conduct by business against business as well as by business against consumers.
The appellant's case is, or can be, put in two ways, firstly, unconscionable conduct by the son affecting the building society, and, secondly, the 'unconscionable' conduct by the building society itself.
The doctrine does not give relief for what is simply an unfair bargain - it has to be an 'unconscionable' one, the terms of which show conduct shocking the conscience of the court.
The more radical elements of the gay community place unreasonable and 'unconscionable' demands on essentially private persons who come into public view.
To define as ‘corporal punishment’ the mere physical separation of two combatants not only puts students at risk but also gives children 'unconscionable' power over teachers who choose to intervene.
The world's leading solo Polar explorer - the only man to ski alone across both the Arctic and the Antarctic, a survivor of encounters with enemies as varied as ravenous bears and 'unconscionable' loneliness - is quitting.
This approach effectively permitted a defendant to reap the fruits of his own 'unconscionable' conduct (subject to the latent damage provisions), and deprived the subsection of much practical substance.
Where the ground relied on is 'unconscionable' conduct in a foreign court the principle of comity requires that the jurisdiction be exercised only with great caution.
Members will be picked by the president, and the scope is 'unconscionably' wider than is necessary.
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