Get Free Checker

undeservedly

[ UK /ˌʌndɪzˈɜːvɪdli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an unmerited manner
    the team chalked up another victory, the last one quite undeservedly, in my opinion

How To Use undeservedly In A Sentence

  • Words cannot express what I today have undeservedly suffered.
  • As one might expect from this most ludic author, one of the more undeservedly unknown masters of twentieth-century prose, these essays are hardly traditional academic exercises.
  • Press undeservedly , pull, rub can organize skin lower level flimsily destroy, cannot have the effect of hairdressing not only, rise instead counteractive.
  • A dream died last night, cruelly, abruptly and undeservedly. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is certainly more of an auteur than many directors who undeservedly receive that label.
  • Press undeservedly , pull, rub can organize skin lower level flimsily destroy, cannot have the effect of hairdressing not only, rise instead counteractive.
  • Stephen Potter, a British humorist who has undeservedly faded into obscurity, is the father of "one-upmanship," a strategem for besting an opponent—somewhat unfairly—without actually cheating. Biz One-Upmanship 101
  • This had felt untameable well before the end and he will depart South Africa, undeservedly, on a sour note. World Cup final: Howard Webb's dream job descends into nightmare
  • (Fred accuses me here of a very bad pun, and reminds me, quite undeservedly, that the pun is the lowest form of humor.) The Window at the White Cat
  • In 1774 Dr. Johnson, in a letter, wished that “what is undeservedly forgotten of our antiquated literature might be re - vived” and John Berkenhout in 1777 subtitled his Biog - raphia Literaria, A Biographical History of Literature, in which he proposed to give a “concise view of the rise and progress of literature.” LITERATURE AND ITS COGNATES
View all