infallible
ਪਰਤਨ
definition
adjective
doctors are not infallible
incapable of making mistakes or being wrong.
example
Although they sturdily protected public morals by preventing the sound of a toilet's flushing being heard on stage and routinely objected to bed scenes and bare flesh, they were neither 'infallible' nor inflexible.
Vedic knowledge is 'infallible' , above all doubts and mistakes.
While not 'infallible' , the system is widely accepted in academia, and used for the assigning of credit, and hence employment, allocation of funds, and the like, within universities.
Its record is by no means 'infallible' , but Debka strikes me as more reliable than most, and more interesting than almost any.
Two heads are better than one, not because either is 'infallible' , but because they are unlikely to go wrong in the same direction.
Experience is a great tool to possess when visually evaluating a swimmer's condition but it is not 'infallible' and we all make mistakes.
The really impressive thing about the post-Christian world is its almost 'infallible' knack for deriving exactly the wrong lesson from its experience.
Unlike church dogma, encyclicals are not 'infallible' pronouncements, but Catholics are expected to follow them, while the declaration of the papal view limits the freedom of theological discussion.
Cole is claiming that the Response is binding because it simply restates 'infallible' teachings of the Church.
During the rest of the series, Trescothick has been 'infallible' , and his reliability at first slip has improved England's out-cricket hugely.
You need to bear in mind that your judgment is not always 'infallible' .
Indeed it is assumed that governments are 'infallible' and can do no wrong.
And, of course, if you start thinking that the Pope is wrong about that then the Pope can't be 'infallible' .
Our leaders are 'infallible' and there is nothing, absolutely nothing, wrong.
Farwell is convinced that his technique is nearly 'infallible' .
Politicians must present themselves as 'infallible' , incorruptible, incapable of dishonesty.
So why not make use of modern technology, he whispered, reassuring himself that his reasoning was sound and 'infallible' .
The censorship method… is that of handing the job over to some frail and erring mortal man, and making him omnipotent on the assumption that his official status will make him 'infallible' and omniscient.
Some even advertised their wares as 'infallible' and guaranteed.
While the Canadian government, for all its faceless fumbling bureaucracy, isn't 'infallible' , we've also never had an iron-fisted strongman declare every Monday a holiday to honour his dog.
Papal pronouncements, for instance, are judged to be 'infallible' only as part of the extraordinary magisterium.
In the past it has proved 'infallible' but that, as I am sure you are aware, is no guarantee of future success.
Books, television, even dear old 'infallible' Mom have steered you wrong.
I have never been mistaken before, but even I am not 'infallible' .
I'd love to say yes, there is a way and here it is, the perfect and 'infallible' method of knowing, in advance, if you will have a wonderful lifelong marriage.
Where humans live pleasurable easy lives, being looked over by sentient immortal Minds who are far from 'infallible' but pursue a life of wisdom and a search for abstraction while tending the human flock in their care.
I don't wish to trivialise a potentially fatal disease but received wisdom isn't always 'infallible' , not even received medical wisdom.
That there is no 'infallible' way to distinguish the genuine cases from the fraudulent ones causes the liberal sentimentalist no particular anxiety: he wants to feel generous, not to be generous.
Nevertheless, can it be possible that the legendary spin doctors, the hi-tech whiz-kids, the men with a reputation for being 'infallible' , have miscalculated?
Price is not always an 'infallible' guide to quality, though you would be very unlucky to find a poor-quality vintage champagne costing more than £40 a bottle.
Credits: Google Translate