Dictionary
to candor
noun
Whiteness; brilliance.
Exact(11)
But soon she was back to candor.
There's a vanity to candor that isn't really worth it.
The upside to candor is too small; the downside too great.
Given these powerful deterrents to candor, why urge novelists to write criticism at all? Certainly not because the world needs more "hatchet jobs" or literary "feuds".
Oddly, the focal point of the controversy around Wolf's set the joke singled out for scolding connected Sanders's eyeshadow preferences to her cosmetic approach to candor.
A corporate culture which regards truth as a convenience was bound to prefer a coverup to candor; in this respect the response to the hacking scandal was instinctive.
Similar(45)
Korda and Chuck Adams went to California to urge the President to greater candor.
If straights were ever to get used to us, candor seemed a reasonable means.
AMEC surveyed its workers a year later, asking them to respond anonymously to encourage candor, and 95percentt said their productivity had not been affected.
They objected to its candor, as well as to what Mrs. Kennedy deemed vulgarities.
People began to warm, however condescendingly, to her candor and lack of self-consciousness.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com