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unthought

[ UK /ʌnθˈɔːt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. so unexpected as to have not been imagined
    an unthought advantage
    an unhoped-for piece of luck
    an unthought-of place to find the key

How To Use unthought In A Sentence

  • And, indeed, as [52] Scaliger observes, nothing more invites a reader than an argument unlooked for, unthought of, and sells better than a scurrile pamphlet, tum maxime cum novitas excitat [53] palatum. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • If the rows on the ears of corn are irregular and broken, the planter is considered careless and unthoughtful.
  • On the other hand, if we bite the hand that feeds us in some unthought of way, we could be erased in a moment.
  • In the early twenty-first century, lower costs for search, coordination, and evaluation are making previously unthought-of applications feasible - just as happened with the Internet in the 1990's.
  • He is, as mentioned earlier, sometimes unthoughtful and inconsiderate.
  • I also like Mill's querulous intolerance of the conformist pressure of orthodoxy and his impatience with unthoughtfulness.
  • Let us say that the cheating person, in this hypothetical scenario, is a woman, and that her husband is kind of an unthoughtful jerk.
  • Everything in the media starts from the assumption that ‘We mean well,’ and from the unspoken, indeed unthought, assumption that this claim need never be questioned.
  • A creative person is neither a utopianist nor an unthoughtful daredevil.
  • Just when a decisive voice is called for, there's Michael Ignatieff bleating almost en passant about the Harper cut-and-run exercise, and then proffering loads of hype about a Liberal "thinkers 'conference" in March (which may conflict with a Spring election call, leaving all those thoughts unthought). Opposition: time to recalibrate
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