What's the difference between unarguable and uncontestable?
Unarguable
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) The importance of the synovial APC in determining the synovial immune response is unarguable but the exact mechanisms are unclear.
(2) And the result is, unarguably, a significant advance, in terms of realism, on its celebrated public information predecessor : Women, Know your Limits!, in which the woman character's principal contribution to a political debate is the highly unlikely – given not a single cat is in evidence – "I do love little kittens."
(3) The euro crisis brought Merkel to the fore as unarguably the most powerful politician in Europe.
(4) These rights seem clear and unarguable and are largely enacted in policies and services for children living in Australia.
(5) At the court of appeal in London on Wednesday, Lord Justice Hughes, Mr Justice Treacy and Mr Justice Blake rejected his application for permission to appeal and said the proposed grounds were "unarguable".
(6) In extreme cases, such as mentally defective persons, the consent-giver is unarguably incompetent to directly exercise autonomy and a substitute consent-giver or decision-maker is required.
(7) "Although it was not linked with to any real person when written, the committee believed that the song had clearly and unarguably gained association with Lady Thatcher."
(8) Credit for inventing trip-hop, one of the most influential musical genres of the 1990s, cannot be allotted to just one person, but Jonny Dollar, who has died of cancer aged 45, was unarguably one of its main architects.
(9) Social mobility sounds unarguable, but like so many other ideas that are apparently self-evident – the primacy of the "hard-working family", the ubiquity of "generations of worklessness" – its apparent simplicity is a cover.
(10) Leo Hollis, author of Cities Are Good For You , says the one unarguably positive achievement of smart city-style thinking in modern times is the train indicator boards on the London Underground.
(11) But once things quieten down, he sketches out a portrait of modern society that often sounds unarguable.
(12) Climate campaign petition Introducing the campaign, editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger wrote : “This [campaign] will almost certainly be won in time: the physics is unarguable.
(13) Brazilian health authorities subsequently downplayed the significance of the sale of contaminated blood in HIV transmission, and likewise ignored the rising rates of AIDS among Brazil's one unarguable majority group: the poor.
(14) And while some politicians say this takes the conversation beyond class – that class is fixed, whereas cycles of deprivation caused by neglect are alterable – it is unarguable that this scrutiny would never extend to the middle class.
(15) The chain has had an unarguably beneficial effect on prices.
(16) The case for having such a post in government, going beyond the brief of an equalities minister, seems to me urgent and unarguable.
(17) The very people who had created the Labour movement and who had given it a voice and unarguable moral force throughout the 20th century were watching the dismantling of the communities that had shaped them.
(18) Our NHS Confederation Patients as Partners programme is starting to show how we can do this and the evidence is becoming unarguable.
(19) According to legal documents related to the case it added: “It is unarguable that at the relevant time (May 2015) the school was required as part of its safeguarding responsibilities to be aware of the dangers of radicalisation.
(20) The deputy prime minister not only believes the moral case for doing this is overwhelming, he also thinks the political case for action is unarguable as well.
Uncontestable
Definition:
(a.) Incontestable.
Example Sentences:
(1) However, that only applies when the dropped ball is uncontested, as they often are inside the area.
(2) It will also include proposals to introduce television cameras into courts, reform judicial appointments and allow magistrates sitting on their own to operate from community centres and police stations to deal with low-level uncontested cases within days or even hours of arrest.
(3) The testimony relating to the Gadahn video was uncontested by the defence, even though the video was released several months after Manning was arrested in Iraq where he was working as an intelligence analyst.
(4) Sturgeon will take over as SNP party leader on Friday after an uncontested leadership election, but will not formally be sworn in as Scotland’s first female first minister until her expected election by MSPs on Wednesday and a formal swearing-in ceremony on Thursday in Scotland’s supreme civil court, the court of session.
(5) And yet, in all probability, there will never be a set of clean, uncontested, verifiable facts, set out like exhibits in the public domain, for us all to handle.
(6) At the frontline, the picture is murkier but richer: there's plenty of data (at least in acute settings) but this is rarely uncontested and often hard to unpick.
(7) Ten years ago Mexico completed a velvet transition to democracy after 71 years of one-party rule with the opposition winning an uncontested victory in presidential elections and the economy growing at 6.6%.
(8) It will also include proposals to introduce television cameras into courts, reform judicial appointments and allow magistrates sitting on their own to operate from community centres and police stations so they can deal with low-level, uncontested cases within days or even hours of a suspect's arrest.
(9) But if you believe ideas have power, then you must believe in the power of bad ideas to harm when they are left uncontested.
(10) Many accounts, including the club's version on its website, cite missile throwing by Italian fans as the spark for violence, a claim contested by other eye-witnesses, but the broad facts are uncontested.
(11) 3.50am BST Heat 65-64 Spurs, 6:26 remaining, third quarter Uncontested layup for My Australian Guy gives the Spurs a brief lead, but it's oh so very brief as Rashard Lewis, Rashard Lewis, hits another three-pointer.
(12) Uncontested is the contribution of chronic hyperglycemia in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy.
(13) China knows it is becoming an uncontested superpower; indeed its newfound muscular confidence was on striking display in Copenhagen.
(14) Qwabe says: “I was trying to think about how the world would have reacted if it was a Houlocaust comeback or something which is globally uncontested as historical injustice.” Kiran Benipal, a classics student and co-founder of Rhodes Must Fall In Oxford, says it’s rare a week goes by in Oxford without an incident of racial discrimination or insensitivity.
(15) The diagnostic value of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in multiple sclerosis (MS) is uncontested.
(16) The real argument is uncontestable: that by dragging this out, elderly victims might never achieve justice and redress for their appalling treatment.
(17) Temporary atrial pacing leads have uncontested utility for diagnosis and treatment of postoperative supraventricular arrhythmias.
(18) Our unanimous report, Children in Military Custody , found that the uncontested facts (we did not rely on disputed ones) showed Israel to be regularly violating at least six important provisions of the UN convention on the rights of the child as well as the ban in the Geneva conventions on transporting prisoners across frontiers – something to which Israel, of all countries, should be sensitive.
(19) The monkeys hit the target in significantly less time on contested than on uncontested trials.
(20) We have concluded that the 1,400 figure is a conservative one and that RMBC and South Yorkshire police (where some also dispute the figures) would do better to concentrate on taking effective action rather than seeking to continue a debate about the numbers.” Casey said she considered it an uncontested fact that children in Rotherham were “sexually exploited by men who came largely from the Pakistani heritage community” and that not enough was done to acknowledge this, stop it happening, protect children, support victims and apprehend perpetrators.