unfavourably
IPA: ʌnfˈeɪvɝʌbɫi
adverb
- (British spelling) In an unfavourable manner.
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Examples of "unfavourably" in Sentences
- Ms Munene had spoken "unfavourably" of Mr Njuguna, she said.
- Tonight at dinner he loudly and unfavourably compared Charles to his cousin Louis.
- He would not have to look back and compare his last term unfavourably with the glories of yester year.
- As a result, it is quite possible to interpret homeopathic data selectively and unfavourably, which is what appears to have been done in the Lancet paper.
- There are a limited number of homeopathic studies so it is quite possible to interpret these data selectively and unfavourably, which is what appears to have been done in
- A 9th grade student when compared unfavourably to his sibling said to his father defiantly, "You are a VP in an IT company, you haven't accomplished much, just look at Bill Gates".
- Ascot 5.00 Kept back for this race since comfortably winning at Newbury on his reappearance from an unfavourably wide draw, Modun has gone up plenty in the weights but will still take some beating.
- But the ticket prices compare unfavourably with the cheapest tickets for last year's World Cup final in South Africa which cost £106 and next year's Olympics where seats are available for the 100m final night at £100.
- That compares unfavourably, he said, with fields of technology such as the development of mobile phone apps and the emerging scientific sub-field of synthetic biology, which are much easier, and so cheaper, for people to explore.
- As Bermudians continue to react - unfavourably for the most part - to their government's acceptance of former Guantanamo Bay detainees as full citizens of the tiny island, bloggers comment on yesterday's protest and what the public outcry could mean for the nation's Premier.
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