unquestionedun‧ques‧tioned /ʌnˈkwestʃənd/ adjective - Ogden's work ethic is unquestioned.
- Forbes' allegiance to Wanniski, Kemp and other supply siders who influenced the Reagan administration is unquestioned.
- If he had not wanted to allow the man to be prosecuted, he had an unquestioned right to call him home.
- In becoming routinized, however, roles and relationships carry an essential ideological function in the fact that what exists remains unquestioned.
- It is these markets that lend the behavior of even the most restrictive central banks an aura of unquestioned virtue.
- Many find their child-free existence supported or unquestioned.
- The meanings and typifications of institutions are unquestioned in the course of everyday life for the people who use them.
- They really were part of the unquestioned reality of the culture of the state.
- They were mere freighters of doctrine, not questioners, which they unloaded in unquestioned dribs and drabs around their parish.
NOUN► assumption· Nevertheless, there is an unquestioned assumption that the pupils selected would have no difficulty in following a grammar-school course.
nounquestionquestioningquestionerquestionnaireadjectivequestionable ≠ unquestionablequestioning ≠ unquestioningunquestionedadverbunquestionablyquestioningly ≠ unquestioninglyverbquestion