uncommittedun‧com‧mit‧ted /ˌʌnkəˈmɪtɪd◂/ adjective - About half the electorate were party supporters in 1986, and half uncommitted, by this definition.
- Brown polled 23 percent, Harkin 14 percent, Tsongas 12 percent, and a further 22 percent of votes were uncommitted.
- But amongst uncommitted voters, it increased by 28 percent amongst Express/Mail readers and 50 percent amongst Sun/Star readers.
- He liked women, and before his marriage had enjoyed a succession of casual, satisfactory and uncommitted affairs.
- In contrast, there was no drift to the Conservatives amongst uncommitted Mirror readers.
- Other entries are given an uncommitted status.
- The book is certainly authoritative but may well daunt the uncommitted reader by its relentlessly hard-nosed factuality.
- The influence of the tabloid press was particularly strong on the uncommitted.
adjectivenoncommitalcommitted ≠ uncommittednouncommitmentverbcommit