unfairly
unfairly — 副詞
1. when someone behaves or acts without fairness — for example, treating one group
不公平
以不公平的方式對待他人或團體
when someone behaves or acts without fairness — for example, treating one group more harshly than another for no good reason
The hiring manager was accused of acting unfairly by rejecting qualified women candidates.
這位招聘主管被指控拒絕合格的女性求職者,做法不公平。
passive + of + gerund: be accused of acting unfairly
The referee was criticized for unfairly penalizing one team throughout the match.
裁判在整場比賽中不公平地處罰其中一隊,因而受到批評。
adverb before gerund: unfairly penalizing
The judge ruled that the tenant had been treated unfairly by the landlord.
法官判定房客受到房東不公平的對待。
The teacher gave unfairly low marks to students who asked too many questions.
那位老師對提出過多問題的學生打了不公平的低分。
The night-shift supervisor was fired for unfairly blaming the junior staff for every mistake.
那位夜班主管因為每次出錯都不公平地責怪下屬而被開除。
- unjustly
more formal and typically used in legal or moral contexts
- wrongfully
specifically implies a violation of a legal or moral right
- inequitably
formal; focuses on unequal distribution or treatment across groups
- unduly
suggests an action is excessive or beyond what is reasonable
用法筆記
Frequently used with passive verbs describing how a person or group is treated, such as treat, penalize, criticize, judge, accuse, and reject. The adverb usually appears directly before the past participle or gerund it modifies.