unfair
/ˌʌnˈfeə(r)/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌʌnˈfer/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌən-ˈfer/ (ame, mw)
unfair — 形容詞
- unfairpositive
- more unfaircomparative
- most unfairsuperlative
1. not giving all people the same chance, treatment, or advantage; going against wh
不公平
不公正的;違反道德的
not giving all people the same chance, treatment, or advantage; going against what is morally right or acceptable.
The teacher's decision to fail only Ilan seemed unfair to the rest of the class.
老師只讓 Ilan 不及格的決定,對班上其他學生來說似乎不公平。
collocation: unfair + to + someone
Many workers believe the new policy is unfair because it cuts their pay without warning.
許多員工認為這項新公司政策不公平,因為它無預警地減薪。
it + be + unfair + because-clause
It feels unfair that Selim does twice the work of colleagues for the same pay.
Selim 做同事兩倍的工作,卻領一樣的薪水,這讓人感覺不公平。
The referee made an unfair call that cost the home team the match.
裁判做出了一個不公平的判決,讓主隊輸掉了比賽。
Kabir argued that the interview process was unfair to candidates without university degrees.
Kabir 認為面試過程對沒有大學學位的求職者不公平。
- unjust
more formal and serious, often used for laws or systems
- biased
focuses on favouring one side without good reason
- unequal
emphasises lack of balance in distribution or treatment
- discriminatory
specifically describes treating people differently based on group identity
文法句型
unfair + to + someone
unfair + that-clause
unfair + noun
用法筆記
Commonly formed with more/most (more unfair, most unfair) rather than -er/-est endings, though unfairer/unfairest are occasionally used in informal British English. The correct preposition after unfair is to (unfair to someone), not for or with.