unjust
unjust — adjective
1. describing a situation, action, or decision that is morally wrong because people
describing a situation, action, or decision that is morally wrong because people are not treated equally or do not receive what they deserve
Lucía called the new policy unjust because it charged poor families higher fees.
attributive use: unjust + noun (policy)
Hoa's sudden firing after twelve years at the factory felt deeply unjust to her colleagues.
predicative use: felt deeply unjust
Anjali argued that punishing the whole class for one student's mistake was an unjust rule.
Asher believed the court's decision was unjust because the key evidence had been ignored.
- unfair
more common and slightly less formal; unjust carries a stronger moral or legal weight
- inequitable
formal term focused on lack of fairness in distribution or treatment
- wrongful
emphasises that an action violates a legal or moral right
文法句型
unjust + noun
be + unjust
unjust to/towards + noun phrase
用法筆記
Often used with adverbs such as deeply, fundamentally, or profoundly to emphasise the degree of unfairness. Can appear before a noun (an unjust law) or after a linking verb (the punishment was unjust).