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The phrase "a uneducated" is not correct in written English; it should be "an uneducated." You can use it when referring to someone who lacks education or formal schooling.
Example: "He was often dismissed by others because he was seen as an uneducated man."
Alternatives: "an illiterate" or "a non-educated person."
Exact(2)
Greene hated Shakespeare and spent years attacking him in print, mainly for being a) uneducated and b) ripping off other people's work.
He's distracted by an attraction to Callie the Mail Girl, a uneducated, butch-looking woman who turns out to be reading Ben Jonson in her own copy of the Norton Anthology.
Similar(58)
He is a jockey, an uneducated but a grateful one.
After two years in reform school, I was a naïf who used to be a thief; an uneducated twenty-year-old without a high-school diploma.
"She was a good girl, an uneducated girl," Zarmina's mother said.
"What would I do with a husband, especially an uneducated husband?" Zehia asked.
Using the unflattering vocabulary of the American military, Mr Taban describes Mr Kiir as an uneducated "jarhead" (a nickname usually reserved for the US Marine Corps).
As you can probably tell this is actually a matter of an uneducated sales staff.
She describes how their relationship went on like this until April, when her family arranged her marriage to a distant relative, an uneducated cattle tender in her village.
Young children can be groomed and abused right under an unaware and an uneducated adult's nose.
Over a few beers, the agent told him that selling houses could turn an uneducated man into a millionaire.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com