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unsensational

ADJECTIVE
  1. not of such character as to arouse intense interest, curiosity, or emotional reaction

How To Use unsensational In A Sentence

  • The first issue offered plenty of royal news, of a most unsensational sort. Times, Sunday Times
  • In an admirably restrained and unsensational piece of journalism in last Sunday's Telegraph, Olga Craig told how she had visited his mourning family to find out how it happened.
  • The more I read this diary, the more I began to trust its terse, unsensational observations, the sense it imparted of an observant man writing not to impress posterity but simply to record his own memories.
  • I certainly feel very strongly that it was genuinely in the public interest and equally strongly that it was done in a very unsensational way.
  • Its contents proved to be unsensational (see page 61). Times, Sunday Times
  • We should therefore take heart from what has largely been an unsensational, sensitive and informed approach not just to reporting events but to untangling the complex political and diplomatic background.
  • Abandoned by their neglectful mother, four children are left to fend for themselves in this quiet, unsensational but minutely observed drama by Japan's Hirokazu Kore-eda.
  • And there are pretty unsensational reports showing that Kincaid was in the Yuma area at the right time, doing exploration work.
  • Reporting on Reich's appointment has been decidedly unsensational.
  • The contradiction in this case is that Gilligan's bombshell was initially reported in such a dozy, unsensational manner, with all those ‘erms’ and the infamous ‘probably’.
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