[
US
/ˌwənˈsaɪdəd/
]
ADJECTIVE
- not reversible or capable of having either side out
-
favoring one person or side over another
a biased account of the trial
a decision that was partial to the defendant -
involving only one part or side
a unilateral decision
unilateral paralysis
How To Use one-sided In A Sentence
- But I object to that becoming a very one-sided issue.
- It is sad, very sad to watch a great champion being beaten in a one-sided fight where he cannot offer any meaningful counterpunch, which is what boxing is all about. Undefined
- I feel guilty that Gwen and I have such a one-sided relationship.
- Obviously economic security cannot be a one-sided affair. Inside Perestroika: The Future of the Soviet Economy
- One senior European diplomat said that it was a one-sided account. Times, Sunday Times
- In all but the most one-sided encounters, however, the ascendancy shifts between the teams.
- This one-sided provision has created bad incentives for attorneys and the litigants they represent.
- It's wonderful to work with someone whose changes and ideas for the art are obviously concerned with the success of the illustration itself and how it works in the book, and not simply one-sided fiddling and rearranging based on individual preference or a stilting focus on the exactness of how a scene was imagined originally. The art of Leviathan, Part Two: An interview with Keith Thompson
- Few spectators in the stands remained for the last inning, disgusted with such a one-sided score.
- The contest was too one-sided to be exciting.