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unnecessarily

/uhn-nes-uh-ser-ee/US // ʌnˈnɛs əˌsɛr i //UK // (ʌnˈnɛsɪsərɪ, -ɪsrɪ) //

不必要地,无谓的,不必要的,不必要

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not necessary or essential; needless; unessential.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural un·nec·es·sar·ies.

    • : unnecessaries, things that are not necessary or essential.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The CPG advertiser plans to cut out unnecessary ad tech vendors, particularly supply-side platforms that sell impressions on behalf of publishers, according to a source with knowledge of those discussions.

  • Washington Coach Ron Rivera said after the game that he didn’t think it was a dirty play by Peppers, though the safety was flagged for unnecessary roughness.

  • Also notice how the text doesn’t use unnecessary words within the definition.

  • The report named Mahendra Amin, an OB-GYN in Douglas, Georgia, as the doctor accused of the unpermitted, unnecessary, and unethical procedures.

  • The court upheld a South Carolina law requiring absentee voters to get a witness’s signature, despite some lower courts agreeing with Democrats that a witness’s signature was an unnecessary burden in a pandemic.

  • In other words, unnecessarily stringent abortion regulation could be far more dangerous than abortion itself.

  • Forty million Americans were inoculated, unnecessarily as it turned out.

  • Now, a study shows some breast cancer patients unnecessarily undergoing the procedure.

  • They only have one brain, and jeopardizing its safety unnecessarily is a complete non-starter for me.

  • He also found the president and vice president to be unnecessarily distrustful of the military.

  • An immense quantity of oil is unnecessarily consumed in keeping up this religious custom.

  • I need hardly warn you to be prudent, and not expose yourself unnecessarily to a superior force.

  • Sometimes they have been unnecessarily sacrificed, since human intelligence is, unfortunately, not omniscient.

  • And yet Mrs. Bassett was outwardly friendly, and she privately counseled Marian, quite unnecessarily, to be "nice" to Sylvia.

  • The word maudlin suggests the idea of being ready to weep unnecessarily.