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one-sided

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one-sided

denoting a surface on which any two points can be joined without crossing an edge
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
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References in periodicals archive
That one-sidedness makes a lot more sense if you consider the study not as a piece of financial analysis, but as a tool of economic diplomacy.
"Everyone has faced the one-sidedness of Trump's policy.
The one-sidedness of the media slant was even more evident the next day when a grassroots gathering sponsored by Minnesota Gun Rights and North Star Liberty Alliance brought together 1,000 people at the state capitol in St.
With it becoming a government mandate, there is the potential for this one-sidedness to change with insurers becoming more involved with renewals.
In the case of the Koshi contract, then president, Papadopoulos also had a big share of the responsibility, because despite being alerted to the one-sidedness of the contract and the suspect procedures followed, he agreed to its signing.
The one-sidedness of this statement is almost too incredible to comprehend, but one mustconsider the source.
"The volume can barely be topped in terms of one-sidedness and indoctrination."
The island nation have lost eight and drawn one of their nine competitive meetings with Belgium but the one-sidedness of that record was not evident as Cyprus comfortably kept their opponents at bay.
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