English to Portuguese Dictionary unforgiving

unforgiving

Implacável
definition
adjective
he was always a proud and unforgiving man
not willing to forgive or excuse people's faults or wrongdoings.
example
In response the lord takes back his forgiveness and orders the 'unforgiving' slave tortured.
The surprising thing is that what emerges from such a brutally hard and 'unforgiving' environment is a sense of camaraderie and mutual respect.
She was then employed by Howard, a changeable character, easygoing one day, an 'unforgiving' taskmaster the next.
You are deep in the recesses of a forbidden jungle - an 'unforgiving' place few explorers ever survive.
It would be a daily reminder of one of the most 'unforgiving' - and concentrated - culls of the innocent ever carried out by people on people.
Voters are 'unforgiving' of ministers about underperforming schools and hospitals that don't deliver.
It is one of the only books that turns an 'unforgiving' spotlight on the German people and how they came so easily under the sway of the dark cloud of Nazism.
The people of Galmoy were 'unforgiving' , however, and a ballad composed at the time records their anger and frustration.
Australians tend to be 'unforgiving' , for example, of criminals who have served their jail sentence.
A small proportion of people are stupid and hence don't get it but the criminal law is pretty much 'unforgiving' of stupidity.
But the markets are cruel and 'unforgiving' places and Milne can see the benefits of a listing as much as understanding the downside risks.
Alone we would surely perish; but working together made sense in a hostile and 'unforgiving' world.
Nowadays, we are developing a most 'unforgiving' culture.
But the world is an 'unforgiving' place and best laid plans can go astray.
It reopened after the war to dwindling attendance because of the people's 'unforgiving' response to its withdrawal four years before.
What I found was not the cold, 'unforgiving' building I'd expected but a beautifully proportioned and classy interior.
The desert is an 'unforgiving' place to those who cannot read its signs or understand its subtle warnings.
Earlier, when speaking to journalists, she was equally 'unforgiving' .
Many Brits buying inland don't realise just how harsh winters in Spain's interior can be, or how 'unforgiving' the scorching summer heat.
Time to take his parting gifts and memories and go home, another victim of an 'unforgiving' business.
With its 'unforgiving' machine memory, the Internet might turn out to be the unlikely conscience of the world.
The late 20th century's decline of social deference has led to a journalism which is 'unforgiving' of the elite and its deviations.
This is a very tragic event, and it is very telling of the cruelty of the Taliban and how 'unforgiving' they are.
Do not relax for an instant because our working environment is extremely 'unforgiving' .
It's an 'unforgiving' place and Australians who call it home are critically aware of water, for good reasons.
We should never lose sight of its sometimes violent and 'unforgiving' nature.
Politics is fast and 'unforgiving' , but already the Labour conference triumphs seem dated, while the minor divisions still remain.
But this stark, 'unforgiving' wilderness has proved to be a land of bountiful plenty for one Scottish company.
I suspect you won't look at that angry, 'unforgiving' driver-in-pursuit in quite the same way again.
When people break their promises to me I can be very 'unforgiving' .
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