unfair
unfair 英 [ˌʌnˈfeə(r)] 美 [ˌʌnˈfer]
adj. 不公平的,不公正的
unfair criticism 不公正的批评
It would be unfair not to let you have a choice. 不让你有所选择是不公平的。
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- adj. 不公平的,不公正的
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1. unfair criticism
不公正的批评
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2. It would be unfair not to let you have a choice.
不让你有所选择是不公平的。
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3. They had been given an unfair advantage.
他们得到了不公正的好处。
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4. Life seems so unfair sometimes.
人生有时似乎非常不公平。
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5. She claims to have been unfairly dismissed.
她声言遭到无理解雇。
- unfair (adj.) Old English unfægr "unlovely, not beautiful, deformed, hideous, unlovable," from un- (1) "not" + fair (adj.). Similar formation in Old Norse ufagr, Gothic unfagrs. Meaning "wicked, evil, bad" is recorded from c. 1300. Sense of "not equitable, unjust" is first recorded 1713. Related: Unfairly.
un·fair ★ / ˌʌnˈfeə(r) ; NAmE ˌʌnˈfer / adjective not right or fair according to a set of rules or principles; not treating people equally 不公正的;不公平的;待人不平等的 SYN unjust ◆ unfair criticism 不公正的批评 unfair(on/to sb) ◆ It seems unfair on him to make him pay for everything. 让他承担一切费用似乎对他不公平。 ◆ It would be unfairnot to let you have a choice. 不让你有所选择是不公平的。 ◆ They had been given an unfair advantage. 他们得到了不公正的好处。 ◆ unfair dismissal (= a situation in which sb is illegally dismissed from their job) 不公平解雇 ◆ measures to prevent unfair competition between member countries 防止成员国之间不公平竞争的措施 ◆ Life seems so unfair sometimes. 人生有时似乎非常不公平。 ◆ It's so unfair! 这太不公平了! OPP fair ▶ un·fair·ly ★ / ; NAmE / adverb ◆ She claims to have been unfairly dismissed. 她声言遭到无理解雇。 ◆ The tests discriminate unfairly against older people. 这些测验使年纪较大的人受到歧视。 un·fair·ness / ; NAmE / noun [uncountable ] un·fair / ˌʌnˈfeə(r) ; NAmE ˌʌnˈfer / un·fair·ly / ; NAmE / un·fair·ness / ; NAmE /
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