释义 |
Definition of unsensational in English: unsensationaladjectiveʌnsɛnˈseɪʃ(ə)n(ə)lˌənsenˈsāSHənl Not sensational or seeking to provoke interest or excitement at the expense of accuracy. 不耸人听闻(或夸张)的;不(追求)轰动的 a painstaking, unsensational account of poverty in this period Example sentencesExamples - We should therefore take heart from what has largely been an unsensational, sensitive and informed approach not just to reporting events but to untangling the complex political and diplomatic background.
- It's written in a deadpan and unsensational way; the effect is supremely unsettling.
- I certainly feel very strongly that it was genuinely in the public interest and equally strongly that it was done in a very unsensational way.
- She gives a doggedly unsensational account of rampant, abusive teens in a company town fallen on hard times.
- In an unsensational, down-to-earth manner, this book documents remarkable improvement in many of these people.
- It's a stunning scene, but so muted and unsensational in its presentation that you're hard put to know how to react.
- On purely literary terms, one stands far above the rest: In clear, thoughtful, unsensational letters, he has brought his experience of working at the bankrupt energy trader to life for me.
- The unemployment rate and job growth numbers released Friday were so unsensational as to probably have little effect on the race.
- The contradiction in this case is that Gilligan's bombshell was initially reported in such a dozy, unsensational manner, with all those ‘erms’ and the infamous ‘probably’.
- Earning our trust with his neutral, unsensational tone, the author fills in the blanks without lingering over less flattering details in a lip-smacking manner.
- The report is full of recommendations such as this: unsensational ideas that would make our railways safer.
- The book is also a quiet, thoughtful, undramatic and unsensational story.
- Abandoned by their neglectful mother, four children are left to fend for themselves in this quiet, unsensational but minutely observed drama by Japan's Hirokazu Kore-eda.
- The tone of the article was moderate, non-accusatory and unsensational, and entirely appropriate to a straight-forward and significant news story.
- And there are pretty unsensational reports showing that Kincaid was in the Yuma area at the right time, doing exploration work.
- The more I read this diary, the more I began to trust its terse, unsensational observations, the sense it imparted of an observant man writing not to impress posterity but simply to record his own memories.
- In an admirably restrained and unsensational piece of journalism in last Sunday's Telegraph, Olga Craig told how she had visited his mourning family to find out how it happened.
- This is obviously a subject many will find distasteful; yet the way the subject is handled here is honest, moving, and entirely unsensational.
- Reporting on Reich's appointment has been decidedly unsensational.
- The narrative focuses mainly on the journey from Georgia to Philadelphia, and then from Boston to London, cultivating dramatic tension from its unsensational narrative style.
Derivativesadverb To plod through the diaries is to plod through life with them - slowly, quietly and unsensationally. Example sentencesExamples - Litvin writes quietly, unsensationally and he knows that nothing in this world is very nice.
- It's hard to imagine any other presenter doing this job as unobtrusively and unsensationally as Bruce, who you'd never have down as an ex-Marine.
- The latter's a saga that's all the more harrowing for being so unsensationally told; Sides knows enough to let the details speak for themselves.
- We must solve these problems together by insisting that analysts and the media report on them unsensationally and unpatronizingly.
Definition of unsensational in US English: unsensationaladjectiveˌənsenˈsāSHənl Not sensational or seeking to provoke interest or excitement at the expense of accuracy. 不耸人听闻(或夸张)的;不(追求)轰动的 a painstaking, unsensational account of poverty in this period Example sentencesExamples - It's written in a deadpan and unsensational way; the effect is supremely unsettling.
- We should therefore take heart from what has largely been an unsensational, sensitive and informed approach not just to reporting events but to untangling the complex political and diplomatic background.
- The more I read this diary, the more I began to trust its terse, unsensational observations, the sense it imparted of an observant man writing not to impress posterity but simply to record his own memories.
- I certainly feel very strongly that it was genuinely in the public interest and equally strongly that it was done in a very unsensational way.
- She gives a doggedly unsensational account of rampant, abusive teens in a company town fallen on hard times.
- Reporting on Reich's appointment has been decidedly unsensational.
- And there are pretty unsensational reports showing that Kincaid was in the Yuma area at the right time, doing exploration work.
- The narrative focuses mainly on the journey from Georgia to Philadelphia, and then from Boston to London, cultivating dramatic tension from its unsensational narrative style.
- The book is also a quiet, thoughtful, undramatic and unsensational story.
- The report is full of recommendations such as this: unsensational ideas that would make our railways safer.
- The unemployment rate and job growth numbers released Friday were so unsensational as to probably have little effect on the race.
- On purely literary terms, one stands far above the rest: In clear, thoughtful, unsensational letters, he has brought his experience of working at the bankrupt energy trader to life for me.
- The tone of the article was moderate, non-accusatory and unsensational, and entirely appropriate to a straight-forward and significant news story.
- It's a stunning scene, but so muted and unsensational in its presentation that you're hard put to know how to react.
- This is obviously a subject many will find distasteful; yet the way the subject is handled here is honest, moving, and entirely unsensational.
- In an admirably restrained and unsensational piece of journalism in last Sunday's Telegraph, Olga Craig told how she had visited his mourning family to find out how it happened.
- The contradiction in this case is that Gilligan's bombshell was initially reported in such a dozy, unsensational manner, with all those ‘erms’ and the infamous ‘probably’.
- Earning our trust with his neutral, unsensational tone, the author fills in the blanks without lingering over less flattering details in a lip-smacking manner.
- In an unsensational, down-to-earth manner, this book documents remarkable improvement in many of these people.
- Abandoned by their neglectful mother, four children are left to fend for themselves in this quiet, unsensational but minutely observed drama by Japan's Hirokazu Kore-eda.
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