What's the difference between undisputed and unquestioned?
Undisputed
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) It is undisputed that gastrointestinal toxicity due to NSAID therapy is a class effect.
(2) Tour begins 22 November, NIA, Birmingham, thenia.co.uk Black Sabbath Still without original drummer Bill Ward, but with their first US No 1 album (the Rick Rubin-produced 13), the undisputed godfathers of metal play a handful of UK shows.
(3) Ali and Frazier were both undefeated, Ali had been on a forced hiatus for three-and-a-half years [for refusing to be drafted to Vietnam] and while he was gone Joe became what we knew as the undisputed heavyweight champion.
(4) It is clearly a detrimental health behavior that costs millions of dollars annually and undisputed morbidity and mortality.
(5) Operations in emergency states are undisputed although they carry a tenfold higher mortality rate than elective procedures.
(6) His leadership was abrasive, authoritarian, undisputed.
(7) Three boys with bone ages of 5.5, 8.0 and 9.5 years showed an undisputable effect following HGH administration.
(8) There are few undisputed champions in the restaurant business but I would argue that Vasco & Piero's Pavilion , a traditional osteria-style restaurant specialising in Umbrian cuisine, makes the best bowl of pasta in London.
(9) He ratifies the decisions.” He added: “He’s the undisputed leader of the Muhajir nation.
(10) Paolo Pescatore, an analyst at CCS Insight said: "BT's latest results underline the phenomenal growth in broadband and especially demand for fibre and BT is the undisputed leader in the UK in this area.
(11) In an extract from his book Undisputed Truth: My Autobiography, in Sydney's Daily Telegraph , Tyson says he was furious that Evander Holyfield had head butted him: "I just wanted to kill him.
(12) Although prophylaxis is undisputed in patients having synthetic grafts, antibiotics may not be as important in the prevention of wound sepsis as had been thought.
(13) A mother's role in passing susceptibility to Graves' disease to daughters is undisputed; it seems to be due to the B35 HLA allele.
(14) Thus, the prostitutes remain an undisputed potential source of infection not only of STDs but also several other communicable diseases.
(15) Two months earlier Mike Tyson had knocked out Michael Spinks in 91 seconds to become the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world.
(16) The Associated Press's Sandy Cohen said Simon remained "an undisputed master of his craft".
(17) The government is looking for a bigger majority in favour and larger turnout to win undisputed legitimacy and perhaps a popular mandate for the military chief, General Abdel Fatah al-Sisi, to run for president.
(18) "While not everyone necessarily agrees with Tawakkul's role in the protest movement today, her role since 2007 in the struggle against tyranny and injustice, promoting freedom of speech and women's rights is undisputed.
(19) Total parenteral nutrition is of undisputed value in improving and maintaining patients who are otherwise unable to ingest food adequately by mouth or by tube.
(20) It's pointless to become aerated about it – until it crops up, undisputed, in what should be a reputable news source, like the BBC.
Unquestioned
Definition:
(a.) Not called in question; not doubted.
(a.) Not interrogated; having no questions asked; not examined or examined into.
(a.) Indisputable; not to be opposed or impugned.
Example Sentences:
(1) The importance of wound drainage in casualty and plastic surgery is unquestioned.
(2) It is incredibly difficult to detect manufactured quotes – the voices of people on the street who cannot later be verified, for example – which can go unquestioned without a reason to draw the attention of an editor to query them.
(3) Their persistence has depended on a historically high oil price and unquestioning western backing.
(4) The role of radiotherapy in small cell carcinoma of the lung is unsettled; however, the radiosensitivity of this neoplasm is unquestioned.
(5) And should we really promote an unquestioning adherence to the rule of law?
(6) The unquestioning citation of a dogma of the Ancients until modern times is a common phenomenon in medical history.
(7) Premature closure appeared to originate from subjects at all levels of training, to be easily and unquestioningly accepted by other physicians, and to inappropriately condition diagnostic and therapeutic decisions.
(8) In the case of fine-needle aspiration biopsy of lesions of salivary glands, there are unquestioned clinical indications; none, however, merit its inclusion as part of a systematic evaluation.
(9) 24 hour intragastric pH recording by means of an indwelling minielectrode which is connected to an ambulatory apparatus is unquestioned in the assessment of the pharmacodynamic properties of potent antisecretory drugs.
(10) I’d ask that, instead of demanding black voters’ unquestioning loyalty to Sanders, they interrogate what racism is before demurring to a class analysis that still leaves my working-class family members dead in the street.
(11) I know I can sound like an unquestioning Apple fanboy, but believe me when I say that I don't want them to have it all their own way.
(12) Scotland’s needs have been brutally ignored, its special identity – of which the SNP is the unquestioned guardian – disregarded.
(13) But today's Lib Dem pygmies give unquestioned support to our new Habsburg empire ruled from Brussels.
(14) Yet, in my life outside of the dark theatre, in the lives of black people in 21 st century America, we still struggle for unquestioned personhood.
(15) BCAAs are of unquestioned nutritional importance in view of the evidence of changes that take place in muscle protein catabolism and in plasma amino acids.
(16) The pay regime at Reckitt has not gone unquestioned in the past.
(17) With centralized, unopposed authority, and unquestioned control, China could do what it liked, and this time the people liked what they got: hope, science and vision.
(18) Content analysis of text offers a method for exploring experiences which usually remain unquestioned and unexamined.
(19) I suppose the human race divides into unquestioning obeyers of rules, who are naturally keen on sport, and people, like me, who once gave his mother £20 of real money in exchange for Bond Street in Monopoly.
(20) And, having looked at the data, which reveals that readers are just as likely to search for things about dogs as they are to search for things about cats, I've grown partial to another, somewhat less fanciful, theory, which is that those of us who write about animals on the internet have unquestioningly bought into the cat hype and are perpetuating it.