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one-sided
[wuhn-sahy-did]
adjective
considering but one side of a matter or question; partial or unfair.
a one-sided judgment.
with one party, contestant, side, etc., vastly superior; unbalanced; unequal.
a one-sided fight.
existing or occurring on one side only.
having but one side, or but one developed or finished side.
having one side larger or more developed than the other.
Law.involving the action of one person only.
having the parts all on one side, as an inflorescence.
one-sided
adjective
considering or favouring only one side of a matter, problem, etc
having all the advantage on one side
larger or more developed on one side
having, existing on, or occurring on one side only
another term for unilateral
denoting a surface on which any two points can be joined without crossing an edge See Möbius strip
Other 51Թ Forms
- one-sidedly adverb
- one-sidedness noun
- ˌDzԱ-ˈԱ noun
- ˌDzԱ-ˈ adverb
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of one-sided1
Example Sentences
The relationship is so one-sided that Chicago, where the World Cup opened in 1994, backed out of the 2026 tournament citing the costs to the public.
The resulting one-sided discourse means that views that don’t align with official propaganda often draw harassment and ostracism.
Three years ago, the image of a distraught Coco Gauff crying under a towel was one of the rawest moments from a one-sided French Open women's final.
On Saturday, French acknowledged on Instagram that the video "appeared one-sided", and said she never meant to "mock, or dismiss, or diminish the horror" of that day.
The Black Cats finished 14 points behind Chris Wilder's Blades in the regular campaign and were outplayed in a one-sided first half.
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