[
UK
/ʌnpɹˌɒbəlmˈætɪk/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
easy and not involved or complicated
a simple game
found an uncomplicated solution to the problem
elementary, my dear Watson
an elementary problem in statistics
How To Use unproblematic In A Sentence
- These places present an unproblematic narrative of the site's colonial history, celebrating the importance of the church, farming and fresh water in the foundation of the city.
- Does he really imagine that phrases like 'just peace', 'oppressor', 'atrocity', 'national self-determination', 'brokers of deceit' are unproblematic? The Times Literary Supplement
- The idea of computation is a murky idea and it's a mistake to think that we have a clear, unified, unproblematic concept of what counts as computation.
- To an observer it then seems as if the flight conditions were unproblematic, and many a less experienced pilot has been tempted into launching and flying into unexpected turbulence.
- The group publication of conference proceedings is rarely unproblematic.
- As Geoff points out in his book, the/li r/at the end of ‘nuclear’ isn't at all unfamiliar to or difficult for speakers of English: comparatives like pricklier are unproblematic and show no inclination towards being reshaped.
- Nevertheless, it would be wrong to think that this use of the past as something positive in the present is always unproblematic or unambiguous.
- In other words, Duchamp contradicted the progressivist and evolutionary assumptions, but viewed the appropriation of other cultures as unproblematic.
- But if we look at the stories told in the Gospels about the conception and birth of Jesus, what we find is far from simple or unproblematic.
- What I do know is that the chickadee was, in an obvious and unproblematic sense, responding to me in its expressive, chickadee-like manner.