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Quotes About Scrupulous

Un Dios escrupuloso o crítico, pensó Wilbur Larch, nos mataría a todos.
~ John Irving
Sadists of Mlle Vinteuil's sort are creatures so purely sentimental, so naturally virtuous, that even sensual pleasure appears to them as something bad, the prerogative of the wicked. And when they allow themselves for a moment to enjoy it they endeavour to impersonate, to identify with, the wicked, and to make their partners do likewise, in order to gain the momentary illusion of having escaped beyond the control of their own gentle and scrupulous natures into the inhuman world of pleasure.
~ Marcel Proust
She was no intellectual, but men were scrupulous about avoiding intellectual women unless they had the sense to keep it well hidden.
~ Margaret Way
The banishment of the Constitution and republicanism, like the disembowelment of the Declaration of Independence and individualism, has been scrupulous. There is now a vast gulf between the government the progressives have constructed and the framers' Constitution.
~ Mark R. Levin
Learn your topic through self-study through scrupulous analysis and learn about your goal
~ Sunday Adelaja
Much modern prose is praised for its terseness, its scrupulous avoidance of curlicue, etcetera. But I don't feel the deeper rhythm there. I don't think these writers are being terse out of choice. I think they are being terse because it's the only way they can write.
~ Martin Amis
Few novelists can be more scrupulous than Jane Austen as to the phrasing of the thoughts of their characters.
~ Mary Lascelles
The contrast between the two men, Comey and Trump, was in essence the contrast between good government and Trump himself. Comey came across as precise, compartmentalized, scrupulous in his presentation of the details of what transpired and the nature of his responsibility—he was as by-the-book as it gets. Trump, in the portrait offered by Comey, was shady, shoot-from-the-hip, heedless or even unaware of the rules, deceptive, and in it for himself.
~ Michael Wolff
those were the subjects that Barber dealt with as a historian, and no matter how scrupulous and profession he was in treating them, there was always a personal motive behind his work, a secret conviction that he was somehow digging into the mysteries of his own life.
~ Paul Auster