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Definitions

unconditioned

[uhn-kuhn-dish-uhnd] / ˌʌn kənˈdɪʃ ənd /


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.

She fumed that “pathological hypocrisy has long been a political tradition of Western liberalism and its unconditioned reflex.”

From Seattle Times

Assuming you’re clear in your own mind that your response to the situation is unconditioned by race, you can, in good conscience, try to figure out how to get them to stop imposing on you.

From New York Times

The letter demanded a large number of revisions, particularly ”making these new sanctions permissive instead of framed as mandates” and giving the administration “unconditioned waiver authority” over the sanctions.

From Salon

And they reply to injustice and repression not by resistance or retaliation, but with an utterly new, unconditioned response that leaves the reader lightheaded, transcending even that which we value as “freedom.”

From New York Times

“The voice is silence … it is a voice that is unconditioned, like a horse standing still.”

From The Guardian