[
US
/ənˈtʃæɫɪndʒd/
]
[ UK /ʌntʃˈælɪndʒd/ ]
[ UK /ʌntʃˈælɪndʒd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
generally agreed upon; not subject to dispute
the undisputed fact
How To Use unchallenged In A Sentence
- Enforcers in full-face helmets were everywhere, striding through the crowd with arrogance born of unchallenged supremacy.
- We have also seen that these ideas have not gone unchallenged. Victimology - the victim and the criminal justice process
- Instead, she let the bully go unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
- They are convicted and must, if the US people are to reclaim their until now unchallenged position as torch-bearers for a better world, be booted out of office at the earliest opportunity.
- If you allow insurance companies to get by unchallenged from a public plan, they will play nice until health care isn't the hot button issue any more. Emanuel faces liberal pressure over 'trigger' comments
- Its turrets and towers, its windows and its walls, its capacious kitchens, and its fine halls and banqueting rooms -- unspoiled by the hands of the "restorer" -- have gained for it the almost unchallenged position of being the finest baronial residence which still exists. Heiress of Haddon
- American global power was unchallenged and overwhelming. Times, Sunday Times
- His great international stature remained unchallenged throughout the eighteenth century.
- What Aristotle had written in ancient Greece, classifying the minerals known then, remained unchallenged and unimproved into the nineteenth century.
- Such attitudes go unchallenged by the play. Times, Sunday Times