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How To Use Unscholarly In A Sentence

  • I have often pointed out in this blog how the Leftist leanings of psychologists make them unscholarly and unscientific in the ‘research’ that they do.
  • Their problem is an inattentive and unscholarly belief that they have found a way to expound a tradition without a community or a communion.
  • He brought out in 1747 an edition of Shakespeare in eight volumes which was sharply criticized as unscholarly, and in 1751 an edition of Pope's works.
  • Holden foregrounds his uncertainties and unscholarly speculations, some of which betray a cavalier approach to historical research.
  • With the exception of economics, the Humanities and Social Sciences have become so unscholarly that scrapping ALL of their courses would be of net benefit to the world.
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  • And when a book proves to have been unscholarly, or plagiarized, it should be withdrawn.
  • Both writers made substantial adjustments to the original material, and their editorial work is now regarded as suspect and unscholarly.
  • It is unfortunate that McCloskey, a supposed scholar, would respond in such an unscholarly fashion.
  • Both writers made substantial adjustments to the original material, and their editorial work is now regarded as suspect and unscholarly.
  • Since language is primarily a tool for communication for scholars and the unscholarly alike, let the readers comment whether the example given below can be considered to be true Indian English or not.
  • Occasionally it is also an infuriatingly unscholarly discussion of some of the more important passages of the recent history of archaeology in Australia.
  • What with the silk road and the spread of Buddhism and all, I guess it's conceivable that there's some historical connection, but in this case it was just an unscholarly expedient on my part.
  • The matter is not helped by the unscholarly practice, common in work seeking to orient itself by means of critical theory, of relying on secondary sources.
  • I read it, however, with unscholarly whoops, guffaws, and gasps. Times, Sunday Times
  • They sang, they argued, they published, and in between led rather unscholarly lives. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He is a serious scholar and a brave man, who is not afraid of making enemies, and has trodden on plenty of scholarly corns as well as a fair number of unscholarly ones.
  • And while the popular Web search engine may point students to some scholarly works, it also points them to information that is unscholarly, unsubstantiated and, occasionally, untrue.
  • The bottom line is that both approaches would be unscholarly, and simply inadequate.
  • But rhetoric is more than big words and trope identification - and more than the major tropes that preoccupy unscholarly critics. The Times Literary Supplement
  • For centuries, though, Catholics, however unscholarly, have had an unwitting advantage over many Shakespearean critics.
  • His arrangements fascinate - wild, barbaric, absolutely unscholarly - and yet he has absorbed and extended the musical essence of the originals.
  • It is of course a pleasant paradox that these texts, now diligently kept from unscholarly eyes in the reverent hush of university libraries, were once the subject of scribblings, doodles, litanies of the mundane.
  • If this occurs, Federalists are advised, ‘the best solution is to try to portray them as being intolerant bullies and unscholarly.’
  • Those for whom scientific integrity is secondary might reject the science faculty's position if they perceive it has been made in an unscholarly or arrogant manner.
  • He simply refused to compromise - how unscholarly of him.
  • He thinks the show is unscholarly. Times, Sunday Times

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