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Definitions

noble-minded

[noh-buhl-mahyn-did] / ˈnoʊ bəlˈmaɪn dɪd /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The idea is regulations are often supported by a surprising alliance of noble-minded moralists and profit-driven cynics.

From BBC • Oct. 22, 2019

As an interpreter, Mørk avoided the noble-minded protocol—the high-school-graduation tread—that is too common in Elgar.

From The New Yorker • May 30, 2016

Peter Auty's José is initially defined as the noble-minded nice guy who is ostensibly different from the rest until, of course, we gradually become aware of the demons of instability and obsession that drive him.

From The Guardian • Jan. 18, 2011

It would perhaps be unfair to divulge what follows: enough that, thanks to the play's noble-minded finale, history�unlike parts of Anastasia�calls for no rewriting.

From Time Magazine Archive

But she was a remarkable, noble-minded, kind, good, and single-minded person, whose loss to the Queen, though we lived so much apart, is daily more keenly felt.

From Queen Victoria As I Knew Her by Martin, Sir Theodore




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