inequitable / ɪnˈɛk wɪ tə bəl /

⚽高中词汇不公平不公平的不平等的不平等

inequitable 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. not equitable; unjust or unfair: an inequitable decision.

inequitable 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

unfair

更多inequitable例句

  1. That might sound almost too easy, but in an increasingly polarized and inequitable world, looking out for and caring for each other is vital when faced with extreme weather events like flooding, heatwaves and wildfire.
  2. So it should be no surprise that his response to studies finding inequitable treatment is that SDPD leadership should listen to the community and adapt accordingly.
  3. Access to child care has been identified as a growing national problem, spurred by sky-high costs for parents and the inequitable supply of childcare centers across the nation.
  4. However, the much more efficient approach is to ship vaccine to other countries, where their people can be vaccinated in greater numbers and without the inconvenience, expense, and inequitable impact of personal international travel.
  5. The inequitable impacts of the pandemic are well documented, but what we can do as marketers is not.
  6. He supported policies that redistributed wealth to attempt to ensure a less inequitable society.
  7. First, in moral terms, the current rate structure is grossly inequitable.
  8. In other words, they were a disaster for the economy, and brutally inequitable.
  9. We cannot merely try to recapture the stilted, inequitable, broken economy we left behind.
  10. Franklin objected to Dickinson's proposal of one vote per state on the ground that it was an inequitable arrangement.
  11. The amendment confines its donations to the old States, and, so doing, makes an inequitable discrimination in their favor.
  12. Thus has the idealist conspired with the materialist to keep actual life impoverished and inequitable.
  13. The wicked are dispersed among the clouds, as are also the poor and lowly, an inequitable disposition worthy of a theocracy!
  14. They complement the uninvited poor; both are largely a product of unjust and inequitable social conditions.