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
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  • 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
  • For a long time the U.S. dollar was unchallenged as the world's reserve currency.
  • We would rather not dignify their claims with a response, but we fear that if they are left unchallenged they may enter popular currency.
  • Yet by the end of the nineteenth century - the apogee of the Victorian Age - the moral justification for the empire and the scientific knowledge of the effects of opium use could no longer ensure that this drug trade would go unchallenged.
  • It will batter the dusty old complacencies of a medium that's coasted through the centuries unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ray Barry's free kick from the right found the head of the unchallenged Seamus Keating and his powerful header gave the Red Star netminder Tom Ryan no chance at all.
  • The key to this scheme for world hegemony is unchallenged rule over the Eurasian continent and control of its strategic resources, first and foremost, petroleum.
  • American global power was unchallenged and overwhelming. Times, Sunday Times
  • It yearned for days of yore, when men sat unchallenged atop family and social trees. Times, Sunday Times
  • How had this monster been allowed to terrorise the poor girl unchallenged?
  • The pure and fine essential qualities of the voices, the dizzying harmonies, the fugal calls and responses, the strange relief of the unisons, and above all the free, natural mien of the singers, proudly aware that they were producing something beautiful that could not be produced more beautifully, conscious of unchallenged supremacy, -- all this enfevered him to an unprecedented and self-astonished enthusiasm. Clayhanger
  • Unchallenged wisdoms flow swiftly among the middle classes.
  • He is the unchallenged leader of the strongest republic.
  • But they left largely unchallenged the Bolshevik view of October 1917 itself as the greatest achievement of the world revolutionary movement.
  • Someone, I am not sure which of you, mentioned sanctions; there is a degree of feeling, we gather, that certain actions go unchallenged, go unsorted.
  • The game was fast, the play spirited and strong and neither side was prepared to give an inch of turf unchallenged.
  • HOW could such abuse have been so widespread and yet gone unchallenged and unreported for so long? Times, Sunday Times
  • If he could just walk in unchallenged so could anyone with far more sinister intentions. The Sun
  • As the potential model for other ventures between the public and private sector in Toronto, it would be regrettable if we let Dundas Square's weaknesses as a public square go unchallenged.
  • Heading straight into the sun the bow of the ship raises its fist for another attack on a relentless swell and angry salt spray spews into the air only to fall back into the collective pit of unchallenged hyaline.
  • Why should we leave unchallenged and undebated a practice so horrific that words alone fail to describe it? ProWomanProLife » Note to the administration: They’re not backing down
  • And it's all going on largely unchallenged behind the sacred veil of secrecy that covers the family courts system. The Sun
  • Naked aggression and an attempt to change frontiers by force could not go unchallenged.
  • This goes unchallenged because industry lobbyists have the ear of government.
  • To permit such falsifications to pass unnoticed and unchallenged is a species of connivance at error; for, to quote a maxim which is recognized alike in morals and in law, _Qui tacet consentire videtur: _ "Silence gives consent. The New England Magazine, Volume 1, No. 5, Bay State Monthly, Volume 4, No. 5, May, 1886
  • For some four centuries Aristotle's philosophy and Aristotle's science ruled the West with virtually unchallenged sway.
  • Here the rural areas too were in the hands of the towns and the patriciate ruled unchallenged.
  • I maintain that allowing this lie to go unchallenged is part of a battle that goes down to being able to eat foi gras in spite of the efforts of Ben Bradshaw the Animal Welfare minister (The what!) to ban it. Don`t Get Me Started
  • There is little appetite for unilateral initiative among Western powers today, including the unchallenged superpower America.
  • The fact that such a statement went unchallenged is astonishing, and shows how far down the road we are. The Volokh Conspiracy » Now that the Government has Proved as Incompetent
  • He is the unchallenged leader of the strongest republic.
  • Ms Donovan said Mr Cusack's remarks had done a disservice to those who had chosen to remain with the newspaper and that they could not go unchallenged.
  • To call what this aerial armada did a ‘war’, as distinct from unchallenged slaughter, is to debauch language.
  • This policy is founded on the conception that Washington's unchallenged military supremacy gives it a free hand to use force to assert the global hegemony of American capitalism.
  • They guarded their opponents courteously, looked for unchallenged spaces to catch the ball, and settled for long-range heaves.
  • The adsum of Burns rings out clear and unchallenged. Robert Burns
  • Unlike Britain in the '20s, however, U.S. military and diplomatic supremacy is unchallenged.
  • This was an unlawful interference with a key aspect of press freedom, which cannot be allowed to go unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
  • What he would have done for such unchallenged power yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • The conclusion of World War II saw the emergence of the US as the unchallenged and pre-eminent capitalist power.
  • These views have not gone unchallenged. Introduction to Social Administration in Britain
  • The plan for global domination by the US has been in development for the past decade-ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union saw the US emerge as the unchallenged global military power.
  • This is not to say that the business voice should go unchallenged, but it should certainly have the opportunity to be heard in a loud, clear and unambiguous way at the very centre of government.
  • It is by such mechanisms of remediation that print has long enjoyed its status as a transparent medium of expression, a status that remains unchallenged well into the twentieth century.
  • It is a sign of the appalling lack of civics knowledge among the population and the media that the Democrats go unchallenged when they make these claims.
  • In a democracy, supremacy of Parliament remains unchallenged.
  • Supporters of Social Security really don't have the luxury of letting one lie or distortion go unchallenged or unanswered.
  • Appalled by smugness and self-satisfaction, he simply could not bear to see an Irish institution go unchallenged.
  • These are politicians who have rarely ventured abroad, who wield almost unchallenged power at home and whose main frame of reference for international relations is proper protocol. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet these statistics mostly go unchallenged, as if the mere fact that numbers are involved implies the absolute certainty of what they are saying. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was an extraordinary breach of European epicurean etiquette that could not be allowed to go unchallenged.
  • In particular, his ‘mentalism’, that beliefs about one's own current mental state are epistemologically basic, went essentially unchallenged by the empiricists and positivists, until this century.
  • Are we to accept this prevalent attitude among our politicians who can cry “sodomy!” only when it suits their interests, but who would otherwise be quite content to allow the prevailing status quo to remain unchallenged? Global Voices in English » Malaysia: Anwar Ibrahim sodomy trial
  • Relying on its unchallenged military supremacy, Washington has made it clear that that UN resolutions and international law apply only to lesser countries.
  • The unchallenged power of the consultant is already under investigation, after another incompetent obstetrician was exposed.
  • And it's all going on largely unchallenged behind the sacred veil of secrecy that covers the family courts system. The Sun
  • He may not be a political colossus but he bestrides Scotland with an absolute and unchallenged power.
  • Most of these claims go unchallenged by the popular press and by the Labour opposition desperate not to be branded ‘soft’ on immigration.
  • These views have not gone unchallenged.
  • The acknowledged elephant in the room preventing a more robust American response to the Iranian crisis is the US and British organized coup in 1953, which overthrew the nationalist Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeqh and brought the 33-year old Shah, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, back to the country as unchallenged ruler. Mark Levine: Obama's Problem in Iran Lies Not In the Past, But in the Present
  • The sad, stunning thing is how these remarks go unchallenged - when there are Republicans who know better sitting right there.
  • Steam remained the unchallenged source of power for railroads until 1925, when the Central Railroad of New Jersey introduced the first diesel-electric locomotive.
  • We have also seen that these ideas have not gone unchallenged. Victimology - the victim and the criminal justice process
  • Yet these statistics mostly go unchallenged, as if the mere fact that numbers are involved implies the absolute certainty of what they are saying. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such attitudes go unchallenged by the play. Times, Sunday Times
  • Indeed, some Scottish fans sat through sessions unchallenged while media were turfed out.
  • He is in a position of unchallenged authority.
  • But since their clientele shop routinely in their stores and so lack any alternative point of reference, this fact usually goes unchallenged. SHOPPED: The Shocking Power of British Supermarkets
  • And Britain would be the unchallenged leader of this group. Times, Sunday Times
  • His defence were napping once more and Shaun Varley was unchallenged as he guided in a header.
  • The most right-wing monks have treated the war as a religious crusade to ensure the unchallenged supremacy of Buddhism and the ‘Sinhala nation.’
  • So a strongly worded objective statement is moderated as "combative" -- but a personal attack goes unchallenged? Source: Clinton Camp In Holding Pattern, Waiting On Obama
  • Like the Tea Party, I worry about their future, about their ability to find a job in an economy stagnated by our newfound lack of daring and initiative, in a world where America whiffed at its best opportunity to do anything about fending off climate change and which the only spending that goes unchallenged is to sustain wars 11,000 miles away. Will Bunch: Palin, Beck, the Tea Party and the Big Lie About Saving "Children and Grandchildren"
  • His shot was wayward after he ran half the length of the field completely unchallenged. The Sun
  • We learned one of the way to beat the system is to become the system, to never let a committeeperson seat to go unchallenged. Printing: Fight the DLC Machine; Become a Committee Person for your vo
  • Journalists don't "journalize," they just report, that is, jot down stenographically everything and anything unchallenged. The Latest on Air America
  • These twits have had an unchallenged run in the media for far too long already.
  • American hegemony in defence will, however, remain unchallenged for as long ahead as can be contemplated.
  • He knows that, whether or not any new European Constitution is passed, Britain will be dragged further and further into corporatism if present arrangements go unchallenged.
  • Our contribution to Casino and district is considerable in terms of both financial and social effects and we don't believe that an article such as yours should go unchallenged.
  • _The prosperity of the States depends upon the protection afforded to our male citizens_; and the name and character of _male_ citizens of the United States shall mean one and the same thing and carry with them unchallenged security and respect. History of Woman Suffrage, Volume III (of III)
  • Nevertheless, prescription and hereditary right would never again command unchallenged consent as a basis for legitimate political authority.
  • Its decision to remain outside the law demonstrates high-handed contempt for the rule of European Union law and must not go unchallenged.
  • If he could just walk in unchallenged so could anyone with far more sinister intentions. The Sun
  • These views have not gone unchallenged. Introduction to Social Administration in Britain
  • The more our media toes the ANC party line and offers no investigation or resistance, the more we are left with a true one-party state, unquestioned, unchallenged and unanswerable to its people.
  • For the first time, an American president had travelled to Europe under conditions where the dollar was losing its unchallenged supremacy in the world economy.
  • That surely cannot go unchallenged. The Sun
  • That surely cannot go unchallenged. The Sun
  • And Britain would be the unchallenged leader of this group. Times, Sunday Times
  • Today, America stands unchallenged as a global power, projecting its economic and military strength throughout the world.
  • These are politicians who have rarely ventured abroad, who wield almost unchallenged power at home and whose main frame of reference for international relations is proper protocol. Times, Sunday Times
  • It yearned for days of yore, when men sat unchallenged atop family and social trees. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Welfs could not allow such an election to pass unchallenged and a minority elected their own candidate, Siegfried.
  • The weapons of mass destruction lies went entirely unchallenged, while the great unmentionable throughout the entire debate was the imperialist ambitions of the US.
  • Of course, upholding the right to be offensive does not mean allowing objectionable views to go unchallenged, on some spineless basis that everybody is entitled to his opinion.
  • He said without that freedom Britain would be ‘a society with a veneer of tolerance concealing a snakepit of unaired and unchallenged views’.
  • Heading straight into the sun the bow of the ship raises its fist for another attack on a relentless swell and angry salt spray spews into the air only to fall back into the collective pit of unchallenged hyaline.
  • Unchallenged, mainstream film coded the erotic into the language of the dominant patriarchal order.
  • We are raising resolutions in branches and districts to make sure it does not go unchallenged.
  • According to Gruber, "That the SDAP allowed such gutter politics to go unchallenged from the beginning of the republic to its end with the prominent Jews in its leadership keeping a low profile weakened the party and undercut the republic as well. Trafficking Materials and Gendered Experimental Practices: Radium Research in Early 20th Century Vienna
  • As the Roman Republic after the defeat of Carthage so, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, US supremacy is unchallenged.
  • But since their clientele shop routinely in their stores and so lack any alternative point of reference, this fact usually goes unchallenged. SHOPPED: The Shocking Power of British Supermarkets
  • And it's all going on largely unchallenged behind the sacred veil of secrecy that covers the family courts system. The Sun
  • Yet his ascendancy was not as smooth and unchallenged as might have been expected.
  • If these assumptions go unchallenged, humanitarian intervention will become a soothing name for unilateral and unaccountable exercises of power.
  • False rumours cannot go unchallenged in the future. Times, Sunday Times
  • If this has gone unchallenged since the 1930s then removing the cross may cause more commotion than leaving it — and avoiding the agitation of religious sensibilities is one of the core policies of the Establishment Clause, as I understand it. The Volokh Conspiracy » Cross Memorials on Government Land
  • While his zeal is unchallenged, the strength of his evidence remains uncertain.
  • These ideas have remained largely unchallenged for 60 years.
  • The court heard how Oldnall and her sister managed to walk into the hospital and onto the ward unchallenged, before removing baby Elizabeth.
  • In cultural memory, the dominant image of the 1950s in the United States tends to be one of homogeny and unchallenged white hegemony.
  • Ritualism ensues with an unchallenged insistence upon punctilious adherence to formalized procedures.
  • Unfortunately, it was a warning that went unheeded as two minutes into stoppage time Underwood was again unchallenged as he crossed from the left.
  • They will not allow your more way-out ideas to pass unchallenged.
  • Smith's stranglehold on the high street stationery market has not, however, always gone unchallenged.
  • The forward was able to race towards goal unchallenged and fired an unstoppable effort past Schwarzer. The Sun
  • We don't want these attitudes to go unchallenged.
  • They operated as unchallenged ideological and economic hegemons for a long time unscathed but were eventually felled by their own ‘foreign policies’.
  • Non-classical literature is an unpleasant, disquieting literature which refuses to allow the sophisms of bourgeois complacency to go unchallenged.
  • Naked aggression and an attempt to change frontiers by force could not go unchallenged.
  • That is not to say, however, that the new world order is unipolar, in which one unique pole is universally accepted as the unchallenged arbiter of world affairs.
  • But they left largely unchallenged the Bolshevik view of October 1917 itself as the greatest achievement of the world revolutionary movement.
  • The reason it became incapable of doing this is because it wielded largely unchallenged power for a very long time and did not have to practice self-examination as a result.
  • But they left largely unchallenged the Bolshevik view of October 1917 itself as the greatest achievement of the world revolutionary movement.
  • Therein lies the danger of allowing Bush to continue his term unchallenged, and un-investigated. Why the '08 Elections Are Not the Cure for the Bush Regime Plague
  • Partly this reflects their monopoly of parish discussions, which means their musings go unchallenged.
  • For over a quarter of a century he was the unchallenged spokesman for the north-eastern iron industry.
  • Her industrial relations law reforms remain unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Leaving such egregious errors unchallenged is one of several reasons why ID will never be taken seriously outside the cloister. A Disclaimer for Behe?
  • Big vested interests like the energy companies have gone unchallenged, while you're being ripped off. Times, Sunday Times
  • But Wales did get their priceless second on 67 minutes when Davies curled in another free-kick and Hartson rose unchallenged to power a header to the net.
  • Instead, she let the bully go unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps "persuasion" is just a dubious word-choice and what is meant is more specifically the negotiation of the audience to a certain point of view by logically justifying it, but even if so, it's not wise to let this contrast of reason and rapture slide by unchallenged. Archive 2010-03-01
  • American capitalism was able to afford this reformist policy because of its unchallenged position of world economic dominance.
  • The dissolution of the Soviet Union leaves the US as the planet's unchallenged and unchallengeable superpower - not just in the military and ideological sense, but in economics, technology and popular culture.
  • Ironically, the unchallenged primacy of the supreme leader is also the saving grace of communist ideology.
  • Big vested interests like the energy companies have gone unchallenged, while you're being ripped off. Times, Sunday Times
  • One would think bodyboarding to be the sole province of clueless Mid-Western tourists or strange water-gimps if mainstream surf media were to go unchallenged.
  • She could not allow such a claim to go unchallenged .
  • Chambers was unchallenged to power in a header. The Sun
  • Human rights groups say that any amendments will not go unchallenged, implying that legal means will be invoked to prevent what they regard as serious infringements on human rights.
  • Chambers was unchallenged to power in a header. The Sun
  • This status of the sunnah has remained unchallenged and undisputed throughout the centuries.
  • I could not just stand by and let some things go unchallenged, and because I challenged them, the atmosphere changed.
  • This was an unlawful interference with a key aspect of press freedom, which cannot be allowed to go unchallenged. Times, Sunday Times
  • HOW could such abuse have been so widespread and yet gone unchallenged and unreported for so long? Times, Sunday Times
  • False rumours cannot go unchallenged in the future. Times, Sunday Times
  • The overall effect is spare, spacious, uncluttered corners and a dim airiness suggesting not a vacuum but the unchallenged resilience of colonial attitudes, the finality of officialdom.
  • The Marines quickly began charging up the stairs, reaching the final level unchallenged.
  • Such ‘revisions’ from those who seek to remould his music into something that suits their purposes better generally remain unchallenged.
  • Its decision to remain outside the law demonstrates high-handed contempt for the rule of European Union law and must not go unchallenged.
  • What he would have done for such unchallenged power yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • All this is part of Mallet's schema to make the point that First World supremacy is unchallenged, attacking Orientalism with a much cruder version of Occidentalism.
  • It was a mark of singular self – control in Morris that he suffered this to pass unchallenged, and even unresented. The Wrong Box
  • He may not be a political colossus but he bestrides Scotland with an absolute and unchallenged power.
  • As long aswe remain unaware, the system is likely to continue unchallenged. A $10,000 COCKTAIL FOR TWO » Sociological Images
  • This is predicated on acceptance of the unchallenged military supremacy of the US.
  • As she perceptively notes, this vision of a global system represents a new phase of capitalism which is ‘more universal, more unchallenged, more pure and more unadulterated than ever before’.
  • His shot was wayward after he ran half the length of the field completely unchallenged. The Sun
  • But the United States was never able to regain the position of unchallenged world supremacy that it had enjoyed in the decade or so that followed the Second World War.
  • What is more, all of this evidence is uncontroversial and unchallenged.
  • However, his piece contains inconsistencies and falsehoods that cannot go unchallenged.
  • His gaze is returned, the ‘pleasure of seeing’ is undermined, but his position of privilege remains fundamentally unchallenged and unquestioned.
  • To many, violence has become an intrinsic part of their lives and quite often goes unquestioned and unchallenged.
  • By the mid-eighteenth century the British were to turn the tables completely on the Dutch and win an unchallenged supremacy among Europeans in Asia.
  • For over a quarter of a century he was the unchallenged spokesman for the north-eastern iron industry.
  • If the government had allowed the BBC's report to go unchallenged, the conventional wisdom would now be that the government accepted the allegation that they were liars and frauds.
  • She could not allow such a claim to go unchallenged .
  • Outwardly Britain may have appeared stable; the class system and its accompanying distribution of wealth remained largely unchallenged.
  • They will not allow your more way-out ideas to pass unchallenged.
  • The forward was able to race towards goal unchallenged and fired an unstoppable effort past Schwarzer. The Sun

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