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Showing results for evenhanded.
Definitions

evenhanded

[ee-vuhn-han-did] / ˈi vənˈhæn dɪd /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

What “The Wolf War” also does—and a lot of nonfiction TV doesn’t—is approach its subject in an honestly evenhanded, objective manner.

From The Wall Street Journal • Dec. 16, 2025

Although tensions on the Middle East have ebbed and flowed, the successful Camp David negotiation won acclaim among Israelis and Arabs alike, who praised it as an evenhanded approach from the U.S.

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 9, 2025

CNN’s four-part series “The Many Lives of Martha Stewart,” which aired in January, is probably the most comprehensive and evenhanded dissection of Stewart’s life and career to date that doesn’t include her voice.

From Salon • Oct. 30, 2024

He brought with him a news sensibility honed at the BBC, where he had worked in the interim, and became a key figure in shaping U.S. public television’s in-depth and evenhanded approach to news coverage.

From New York Times • Apr. 12, 2024

But the law is evenhanded; it levies an equal succession-tax on the transmission of badness as of goodness.

From Applied Eugenics by Popenoe, Paul