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unsubstantiated

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[ UK /ʌnsəbstˈænʃɪˌe‍ɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ˌənsəbˈstænʃiˌeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. unsupported by other evidence

How To Use unsubstantiated In A Sentence

  • She offers a persuasive and very interesting hypothesis, as yet unsubstantiated, to which classroom research could usefully be directed.
  • Many of these arguments from the early 1980s now appear rhetorically overextended, with too many unsubstantiated leaps across discursive spans.
  • Persistent, if unsubstantiated, rumours of birds still being offered for sale had continued to circulate. SPIX'S MACAW: THE RACE TO SAVE THE WORLD'S RAREST BIRD
  • The county council has always maintained that these claims are unsubstantiated.
  • Gossip can be the malicious spreading of misinformation, but unsubstantiated tittle-tattle is sometimes all we have to go on. Readers recommend: songs about gossip
  • Wood's second audacious - and completely unsubstantiated - claim was that all the lunar highlands were made of the rock anorthosite.
  • This has led to all sorts of unfair and unsubstantiated accusations being leveled against me.
  • Clearly, however, without further research, a presumption that temporal consistencies exist for other drugs, such as marijuana, barbiturates, and methamphetamine, would be an unsubstantiated one.
  • In September, the FDA sent five warning letters to e-cigarette distributors for "unsubstantiated claims and poor manufacturing practices. Are E-Cigarettes Evil?
  • There have been unsubstantiated claims of low-level intimidation in Dublin through this canvass.
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