[
UK
/jˈuːnəlˌaɪk/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
not alike or similar
as unalike as two people could be
How To Use unalike In A Sentence
- They express that pride in different ways, though, and regularly seem unalike.
- Utterly unalike in almost every way, but there they were, united in newsprint's tombstone prose - and, when you read each life's story, not so utterly unalike after all.
- Lumped together with unalike new acts as part of the Brit - rock renaissance, they welcome the attention, even if they question some of the company they are made to keep - those making what Betts describes as ‘anxious, staccato music’.
- Such theories have to face the obvious objection that brain processes and mental phenomena seem utterly unalike.
- The term also entered popular journalism of the 1920s and 30s, used of composers as unalike as Varèse and Bartók, generally with opprobrious intent.
- Both are big, physical, attractive men whose faces aren't unalike.
- But the two men, while mutually respectful, are spectacularly unalike. Times, Sunday Times
- As Maya Angelou said, "In all my work what I try to say is that as human beings we are more alike than we are unalike. Lisa Haisha: Three Things You Have In Common With Celebrities
- Turning an incident into a lesson, as was his wont, Mather reflected on how alike he and the dog were, yet ultimately how unalike.
- Johnson was valuable to Boswell because they were so unalike; Boswell submissive, Johnson domineering, Boswell a quivering jelly of sensibility, Johnson a solid mass of sense.