[
UK
/ʌnfɹˈɛndlinəs/
]
NOUN
- an unfriendly disposition
- dislike experienced as an absence of friendliness
How To Use unfriendliness In A Sentence
- I can't stand the pace, I suppose, and the competi-tiveness, and the unfriendliness.
- The hall inside echoed with cold unfriendliness.
- To protect themselves from accusations of bullying unfriendliness, these kids are really really nice to everybody all the time.
- A friendly look with the wrong facial expression can turn into an unfriendly stare, and nervousness may be wrongly understood as unfriendliness.
- In this case, the anchoring and hence the unfriendliness/inconvenience for speculation would also mean that the currency regime would become "metastable" as market hedging is more difficult -- but this is a minor inconvenience as one can still speculate/hedge even on a fixed peg e.g. non-deliverable forward for RMB Archive 2006-08-01
- Only if hostility and aggression can be express their unfriendliness and aggression in constructive activity and peaceful competition, will the human race be able to remain and develop.
- It is generally not regarded as being as friendly as Glasgow - and that is probably true - but Edinburgh's problem is probably reserve, rather than real unfriendliness.
- Again, I've found myself in a city where by comparison I start thinking that London's cold, unfriendliness where no-one looks at anyone in the eye is actually rather pleasant.
- What await the politician is suspicion and unfriendliness from the local resident.
- If I take offense easily, if I am content to continue in a cool unfriendliness, though friendship be possible, then I know nothing of Calvary love.