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Discover LudwigThe word "exploitive" is usable in written English and is well written.
It is typically used to describe actions or practices that take advantage of others, often in an unfair or unethical manner.
Example: "The company's exploitive labor practices drew widespread criticism from human rights organizations."
Alternatives: "Exploitative" or "Unfairly advantageous."
Dictionary
exploitive
adjective
Exploitative: taking advantage of someone
synonyms
Exact(60)
The N.C.A.A., at the upper echelon of Division I, is an unseemly universe of exploitation with administrators, coaches, boosters and players using one another in an exploitive dance.
Both leaders managed to find room on their modest craft for the makings of many parties (some of them quite elaborate) and selected their crews in part with an eye toward entertainment.Fortunately, the human race has learned a lot about planning, teams, leadership and fun in the 500 years since the exploitive, mutiny-ridden voyage in which Magellan and over 90% of his crew lost their lives.
Journalists published pieces in radical and muckraking magazines detailing the monopolistic and exploitive practices of Beef Trust businesses as well as the unsanitary conditions of the packinghouses and their tactics to evade even the smallest levels of government inspection.
"We're very conscious of not making anything gratuitous or exploitive while being faithful to the stories of the book and the fans of the book," he said.
Citing such reforms as factory legislation and the freeing of labour unions from legal restrictions, he pointed out that, under pressure from the socialist movement, a reaction had set in against the exploitive inclinations of capital.
Petraeus's ambition is legendary; his pride and his professional devotion to counterinsurgency have now become entangled in an exploitive electoral machine.
Tells about New Alliance Party, run by Dr. Fred Newman, which is closer to an exploitive cult than a political party.
It is a little depressing, on this anniversary taking place during an exploitive and hyperbolic Presidential election, to consider how far the United States, the oldest democracy of all of them, has yet to go.
It's an exploitive thing.' " Paul Seabury, in his 1978 Harper's article, said, "One New York churchman has asked that, at some future time, the cathedral, defiled, be formally reconsecrated.
They charge it with being culturally and financially exploitive saying the Association is controlled by whites, most of the profits go to white businessment and that presenting dances and rituals out of season and out of context for tourists is sacrilegious.
Exploitive players "model their opponents, and then they come up with a strategy that will beat that opponent — 'He raised here, he must have that hand' or 'He plays that way, I'm going to play this way' — and they stop there," Ferguson said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com