释义 |
one-sidedˌone-ˈsided adjective - a one-sided victory
- Corcoran called the accusations unjust and one-sided.
- I'm amazed the paper would print such one-sided views.
- Newspapers often give a very one-sided account of political events.
- Finally, she could bear his one-sided possession no longer.
- Foreign publications have been criticised for alleged one-sided reporting and their correspondents have been denied visas.
- However, this is not an entirely one-sided movement.
- I gritted my teeth and decided it wasn't such a one-sided deal after all.
- In Georgetown, things were more one-sided.
- It's kind of a one-sided game until the whole field is in shadow.
- One, the game couldn't have been fixed because it was so utterly one-sided and tedious.
- This interaction of science and theology is not one-sided.
when a report, description etc is unfair► unfair · The press has been accused of unfair coverage of the recent elections.· There is nothing unfair about a story that is written from both points of view. ► biased a biased report, account etc is unfair and not correct because it supports one particular group, usually because the writer or newspaper has a connection with that group: · There have been complaints about biased reporting in the tabloid press.biased towards/biased in favour of: · Most newspapers are biased towards one political party or the other.biased against: · Roughly four-fifths of Sun readers believed the paper was biased against the Labour party. ► one-sided a one-sided account, description etc is unfair because it only gives one opinion and not the opposite one, or only tells one part of the story when there are other equally important parts: · Newspapers often give a very one-sided account of political events.· Corcoran called the accusations unjust and one-sided. ► slanted presenting facts or information in a way that favours one opinion or side of an argument: · White will make a tough stand against slanted reporting.slanted in favour of: · Her arguments are clearly slanted in favour of capital punishment, in spite of her religious convictions. ADVERB► rather· It was a rather one-sided affair.· And like the new managers, the subordinates had advocated a rather one-sided view of those interface obligations. 1considering or showing only one side of a question, subject etc in a way that is unfair → biased, balanced: The newspapers give a very one-sided account of the war.2an activity or competition that is one-sided is one in which one person or side is much stronger or does much more than the other: a very boring, one-sided game The conversation was very one-sided.—one-sidedly adverb—one-sidedness noun [uncountable] |