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unrelated

US // (ˌʌnrɪˈleɪtɪd) //

不相关的,无关的,没有关系的,无关联的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not connected or associatedan unrelated incident
    • : not connected by kinship or marriage

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • To understand the latest data on altitude training for endurance athletes, it’s worth looking back at a seemingly unrelated study published in 2015.

  • These were determined to be related to an undiagnosed case of multiple sclerosis unrelated to the vaccination, and the trials were allowed to resume, the company said.

  • If after investigating, the monitoring board is comfortable there are reasons unrelated to the vaccine to explain the adverse event, the trial will be able to continue, he said.

  • La Posta only learned of the construction informally during an unrelated meeting with the Bureau of Land Management in March.

  • After a while, mathematicians began to think about what symplectic phenomena would look like in geometric spaces unrelated to the physical world.

  • Before this latest brush with the law, the rapper was facing pot-bust and unrelated gun charges.

  • What other shameful secrets might a search of his Internet history turn up unrelated to his months swooning over ISIS?

  • Both Rezko and Blagojevich have since been convicted on unrelated federal corruption charges.

  • During an interview Tuesday about an unrelated matter, The Daily Beast asked Trump if he is planning on running this time around.

  • Previously, police had linked four attacks—but one of them was found to be unrelated after further interviews.

  • There are other times when I feel the tug and fret to be back.4 It is my mood to-day, as war is a succession of unrelated moods.

  • They are entirely different, and so far as we can see, entirely incompatible and unrelated.

  • Now, the non-scientific mind sees things as more or less unrelated.

  • In rote memory, that is, memory for lists of unrelated words, there is not much difference; but the girls are somewhat better.

  • Let us suppose that two neighboring and unrelated languages, A and B, each possess voiceless l-sounds (compare Welsh ll).