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"uncharitably" Definitions
  1. in a way that is unkind or unfair, especially when judging somebody

28 Sentences With "uncharitably"

How to use uncharitably in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "uncharitably" and check conjugation/comparative form for "uncharitably". Mastering all the usages of "uncharitably" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Little balls of hell," John Waters once called them rather uncharitably.
The E-skin could, perhaps uncharitably, be described as smart plastic wrap.
What are all our habits of thinking, our charming neuroses, our nature and character, if seen uncharitably, but undiagnosed defects?
And that so many of its constituents interpreted her actions so uncharitably, so swiftly, reflects poorly on evangelicalism as a whole.
They're taking something that could be seen—very uncharitably, that is—as unclear, and then taking things about 100 steps further.
To put it perhaps uncharitably but not unfairly, the circuit's 220-to-1 decision in the Louisiana case, June Medical Services v.
Spirit, uncharitably dubbed "America's most hated Airline", has once again found itself at the tail end of the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) for Airlines.
For example, one might uncharitably think Navy admirals lack some knowledge, insight, or skill that prevents them from commanding infantry as well as a Marine Corps general might.
Now he was being swarmed a few feet away from Scanlon, where a delegate from Missouri was inspecting a button describing Clinton's physique uncharitably in Kentucky Fried Chicken terms.
These thousands of tweets, and the online "outrage culture" they could be uncharitably lumped with, are easy to tear down as redundant and self-righteous, and maybe a lot of them are.
") In the early work, her characters existed in a state of elegant alienation, a kind of anomie one review described uncharitably (but indelibly) as a 1980s "cocaine-and-radicchio brand of trendiness.
I've heard people argue that Marion comes off as too stern, too unloving — that she's uncharitably framed as an impediment to Lady Bird's liberation, instead of a facilitator, like her jokey, understanding father.
Uncharitably you could say the goals and demands of the action were unfocused; more realistically, each group is attempting to chip away at a facet of the same problem, which to paraphrase a number of today's speakers, is a company favoring profit over morality.
The problem with the Samsung-Apple dominance in the US is perfectly illustrated by the case of this year's Galaxy S9, which can be uncharitably summed up as a Galaxy S8 with the fingerprint sensor in the right place and some horrifying AR Emoji thrown in.
Shidaiqu is a kind of fusion music. The use of jazz musical instruments (e.g., castanets, maracas) is unprecedented in Chinese musical history. The song however was sung in a high-pitched childlike style, a style described uncharitably as sounding like "strangling cat" by the writer Lu Xun.
He has been referred to, uncharitably, as Loftus's "pale shadow"; a more balanced view is that the two men thought alike on most issues and so worked harmoniously together.Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.1 pp. 236–7 Jones was named Chancellor of St. Patrick's Cathedral and was elected Dean in 1581.
This led the Greeks to believe in a division of the world into five regions. At each of the poles was an uncharitably cold region. While extrapolating from the heat of the Sahara it was deduced that the area around the equator was unbearably hot. Between these extreme regions both the northern and southern hemispheres had a temperate belt suitable for human habitation.
After the signing of the Treaty of Paris (1783), the impoverished nation grew restless under William's rule. An English historian summed him up uncharitably as "a Prince of the profoundest lethargy and most abysmal stupidity."Fulford, Roger Royal Dukes William Collins and Son London 1933 And yet he would guide his family through the difficult French-Batavian period and his son would be crowned king.
Badoglio's mechanized force advanced along the Imperial Highway between Dessie and Addis Ababa. The Italian Commander-in-Chief was to uncharitably refer to this road as "a bad cart track". Badoglio expected some show of resistance at Termaber Pass, and the mechanized column did halt there for two days but all was quiet. The column stopped because a section of the road had been demolished and had to be repaired.
Plato distinguishes between real and non-real "existing things", where the latter term is used of substance. The figures that the artificer places in the gold are not substance, but gold is. Aristotle stated that, for Plato, all things studied by the sciences have Form and asserted that Plato considered only substance to have Form. Uncharitably, this leads him to something like a contradiction: Forms existing as the objects of science, but not-existing as non-substance.
Well-to-do families who could easily afford to send their sons to college were not going to send them to the college for Negroes and women in McGrawville (uncharitably called, by enemies, "the nigger college"). Some money was brought in through the manual labor department, but not enough. So as to make education possible for these relatively inpoverished students, tuition was set very low. In the college division it was $30 per year (), and in the preparatory [high school] division, $15.
It has been suggested - perhaps uncharitably - that this gave him an opportunity to hone a peculiar talent for charming people into providing information that he could then pass on for pecuniary gain, which after 1975 would by of significant value to the East Germany Ministry for Security (Stasi). Other sources refer to his having undertaken "illegal political work" - implicitly on behalf of the still illegal Communist Party - in the Berlin quarter of Wilmersdorf where he had ended up. Fellow antifascists with whom he operated included Leo Dyck, Herbert Eppinger, and Gerhard Fuchs.
He held the seat until the election of 12 March 1921, when he did not contest the seat. Victor Courtney somewhat uncharitably described him as "a tall, austere, aloof English lawyer... quite out of touch with public opinion... He was a dyed-in-the-wool conservative and did not care who knew. I name him as the giver of the most tactless answer to a questioner I have ever heard". Robert Pilkington Pilkington returned to England later in 1921, and at the 1922 general election he stood unsuccessfully as a Liberal Party candidate for the two-member House of Commons constituency of Dundee.
There may be some truth in this as Platz recalled to Weyl that he attended high level meetings alongside Fokker but was never introduced or referred-to as the designer and often never even spoke. Yet when Fokker fled Germany it was Platz who immediately took over the German works on Fokker's behalf. Fokker later moved Platz to the Netherlands, as head designer, when the post-war German operation collapsed which indicates Platz really did play a greater design role than Fokker admits. Weyl uncharitably suggests that Platz's role at the Fokker D.VIII crisis meetings was to take the blame if anything was wrong and not receive credit.
It is a fictional version of some events during the Mau Mau Uprising. Writing in The Guardian, David Wheatley suggested that "The Broken Word is a moving and pitiless depiction of the world as it is rather than as we might like it to be, and the terrible things we do to defend our place in it". In 2009, his novel The Quickening Maze was published. Recommending the work in a 'books of the year' survey, novelist Julian Barnes declared: 'Having last year greatly admired Adam Foulds's long poem "The Broken Word", I uncharitably wondered whether his novel The Quickening Maze (Cape) might allow me to tacitly advise him to stick to verse.
It was joined by the 1st battalion of the King's Royal Rifle Corps from Burma and then its first commander, Major-General Percy Hobart. Hobart was an armoured warfare expert and saw that his troops were properly prepared to fight in the desert despite their poor equipment. Stewart Henry Perowne, the Public Relations Attaché at the British Embassy in Baghdad, perhaps uncharitably referred to the unit as the "Mobile Farce" because it included some obsolete tanks like the Vickers Medium Mark II.Kelly, Saul, The Lost Oasis, p. 121British and Commonwealth Armoured Formations 1919–1946 By September 1939 the artillery was equipped with 25 pounder gun-howitzers and 37 mm anti-tank guns and, in December 1939, Major-General Michael O'Moore Creagh took command.
Her first, Ruth Hall (1854), was based on her life – the years of happiness with Eldredge, the poverty she endured after he died and lack of help from male relatives, and her struggle to achieve financial independence as a journalist. Most of the characters are thinly veiled versions of people in her world. She took revenge by her unflattering portrayals of several who had treated her uncharitably when she most needed help, including her father, her in-laws, her brother N.P. Willis, and two newspaper editors. When Fern's identity was revealed shortly after the novel's publication, some critics believed it scandalous that she had attacked her own relatives; they decried her lack of filial piety and her want of "womanly gentleness" in such characterizations.
The song however was sung in a high-pitched childlike style, a style described uncharitably as sounding like "strangling cat" by the writer Lu Xun. This early style would soon be replaced by more sophisticated performances from better-trained singers. In the following decades, various popular Western music genres such as Latin dance music also become incorporated into Chinese popular music, producing a type of music containing both Chinese and Western elements that characterized shidaiqu. Popular songs of the time may range from those that were composed in the traditional Chinese idiom but followed a Western principle of composition to those that were done largely in a Western style, and they may be accompanied by traditional Chinese or Western instrumentation.

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