Sentence examples for unfairly define from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

The public handicapping can be misleading, but it usually captures some truths about the leading actors and can, fairly or unfairly, define them for an entire presidency.

Issues of test preparation aside, as educators who believe deeply in our school's progressive philosophy of education, we have long understood that a standardized test score can only narrowly and unfairly define a 4- or a 5-year-old, especially given the broad spectrum of human development at such a young age.

"When I read [Trump's executive] order, I knew it would unfairly define a community of over 11 million people by the actions of a few," Alvarado told The Huffington Post on Thursday.

Similar(57)

Yet a lot of those who do are visible and aggressive, with the accompanying violence upsetting and unfairly defining the neighborhood.

He's been told to stop by security but welcomed by passerby, particularly with the rocking horse, which takes aim at the value of "art," unfairly defined by the market, select galleries, and prestigious art prizes.

In her second, back-to-back weekend performance in a prime-time slot at North America's preeminent summer musical event, Del Rey quietly achieved a measure of redemption – a sort of payback for her critically maligned 2012 "Saturday Night Live" set that unfairly defined her as  One Who Refused to Dance before a national audience.

Namely: a means of discrediting his central argument for the White House, and an issue that could all too easily, and unfairly, come to define his essential character.

It is important to accurately define the unfairly maligned term "zero tolerance".

I will speak out because I will not allow the Arab conflict with Israel to be defined unfairly through the prism of one refugee population only, the Palestinian.

Still upset about how they thought the scandal came to define Penn State unfairly.

Sites www.buzzwhack.com A site devoted to deflating important-sounding but pretentious buzz words like "dot-conomy," described as "what happens when the buzz makers run into a word where they can't just add the letter 'e.' " BuzzWhack also seeks to define and debunk unfairly adopted buzz words like "deliverable," which is described as "a perfectly legitimate word that has become consultant-speak".

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