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unpopularity

/uhn-pop-yuh-ler/US // ʌnˈpɒp yə lər //UK // (ʌnˈpɒpjʊlə) //

不受欢迎,不受欢迎的人,不受欢迎的,不流行

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not popular; disliked or ignored by the public or by persons generally.
    • : in disfavor with a particular person or group of persons.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as indisfavor

Examples

  • Second, at a similar point in the recall calendar, Davis was more unpopular than Newsom currently is.

  • Short-sellers have always been unpopular, and they’ve managed to become even more disliked during the GameStop controversy.

  • He negotiated a treaty with Britain that was massively unpopular.

  • We were elected to make difficult, and at times, unpopular decisions while always being transparent with our residents.

  • Under McConnell and former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, their congressional agenda has also been largely unpopular.

  • She became extremely unpopular and was widely blamed for the King's growing weakness as he aged.

  • Why is such a simple countermeasure against headache and disease still so unpopular?

  • Or maybe Ford suggests Frank is onto an old, now unpopular wisdom: nobody and nothing survives for long.

  • The assumption is that President Obama is a drain on Democrats desperate to survive his unpopular numbers in key states.

  • The central government was unpopular, and a group of young Army officers carried out a coup.

  • At the time of his birth, the rulers of the country were very unpopular because of their wickedness and oppression of the people.

  • The imperial army had to be disbanded—a most unpopular and thankless task, requiring both tact and firmness.

  • In fact, there was not, in all the parish, a more generally unpopular man than Billy Birch.

  • It is very unpopular however for any one to expect the King to make any reply to any petitions sent in.

  • An equally unconciliatory spirit prevailed in England, where the repeal of the stamp act had become unpopular.