uncontroversially
uncontroversially — adverb
1. happening or being done without provoking any debate, opposition, or strong nega
happening or being done without provoking any debate, opposition, or strong negative reactions from the people involved
Nadia uncontroversially won the school-board seat after promising to upgrade the science labs.
adverb modifying past-tense verb describing an agreed outcome
The plan to add bike lanes on Park Avenue was uncontroversially approved by the council after one public hearing.
passive: be uncontroversially + past participle
After outperforming every other candidate in the regional debates, Rin was uncontroversially recognised as the best person for the role.
Diego's proposal for solar panels on the school roof was uncontroversially passed by the parent-teacher board after a short discussion.
The education board's new history curriculum was uncontroversially endorsed by all twelve committee members before the semester began.
- without controversy
phrase-level alternative; more natural in speech
- peacefully
broader — focuses on lack of conflict rather than lack of disagreement
- harmoniously
more positive connotation of active cooperation
- controversially
direct opposite; implies causing strong disagreement
- contentiously
implies heated argument rather than mere opposition
用法筆記
Typically modifies a past-tense verb describing an outcome that was widely accepted. Common after verbs like 'won', 'approved', 'accepted', 'passed'. Less common in everyday conversation; more typical of formal writing (news reports, official statements, academic texts).