[
UK
/ˌʌnɹˈɛkənsˌaɪld/
]
[ US /ənˈɹɛkənˌsaɪɫd/ ]
[ US /ənˈɹɛkənˌsaɪɫd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
not made consistent or compatible
two unreconciled accountings
How To Use unreconciled In A Sentence
- The old quantum theory, as these efforts came to be called, was an uneasy and unreconciled combination of the classical ideas of Newton and Maxwell with the quantum prescriptions of Planck and Einstein.
- Then he returns, unreconciled, sword in hand, and slashes his way through everything (including his mother, a gang of schoolchildren, and Takeshi Kitano).
- The rise of political Zionism coincided with resurgent Arab nationalism, an unreconciled collision that continues to occupy our front pages. City of Peace—and War
- One ever feels his twoness, –an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder 214-215. W. E. B. Du Bois, Carol Swain, and African-American Duality
- It is a matter of historical record that free will and determinism have for long periods been either reconciled, unreconciled or complicated in different cultures.
- two unreconciled accountings
- In addition, there are also some disputed territories which are still unreconciled.
- Yet conscience continues to prod us over past unreconciled differences, and memories betray our self-assured surface.
- -- lyrical, allusive, unconsoled -- is this sense of belatedness, a mood that is not nostalgia but is instead a kind of unreconciled yearning for the present. Powell's Books: Overview
- But we were driven into our separate corners, so many of us, and remain largely unreconciled to this day. Matthis Chiroux: Police Violence Against Veterans: A Long and Painful Legacy