iniquity (i-NIK-wi-tee) noun

   1. Gross immorality or injustice; wickedness.

   2. A grossly immoral act; a sin.

[Middle English iniquite, from Old French, from Latin iniquitas, from
iniquus, unjust, harmful : in-, not + aequus, equal.]

   "One golden rule is to accept the interpretation honestly put on
   the pledge by the party administering it. Another is to accept the
   interpretation of the weaker party, where there are two interpretations
   possible. Rejection of these two rules gives rise to strife and
   iniquity, which are rooted in untruthfulness."
   M.K. Gandhi, The Story of My Experiments With Truth, 1927.


This week's theme: words from Gandhi's autobiography.

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The reason there are so few female politicians is that it is too much trouble
to put makeup on two faces. -Maureen Murphy

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Email FIVE@wordsmith.org to vote that AWAD should take a break on weekends.
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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/iniquity.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/iniquity.ram