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unilaterally

[ yoo-nuh-lat-er-uh-lee ]

adverb

  1. involving, done by, or decided by only one person, side, party, or faction:

    Instead of bargaining with teachers and public service workers, the governor and the legislature have unilaterally reduced pension and health benefits.



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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

The police cannot ultimately control public opinion unilaterally.

But that was so yesterday, much like his contention that he lacked the power to unilaterally confer amnesty.

And neither he, nor his secret police squad or some lawyer from Detroit, get to change that unilaterally on a whim.

But the Texas governor ignored statutory procedure and acted unilaterally.

But then some countries with large elephant populations began unilaterally disobeying the ban.

A State, therefore, cannot renounce its international duties unilaterally at discretion, but is and remains legally bound by them.

Direct stimulus applied unilaterally at the responding region induces, on the other hand, a positive curvature.

Each raceme has an axis, called the rachis, which bears unilaterally two rows of bud-like bodies.

Valve turgid in the middle and at the apices which are unilaterally truncate.

Even if we were so thoroughly in disagreement that we would act unilaterally, we couldn't.

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unilateralismunilateral neglect