Saturday , 20 April 2024

Unwieldy meaning

Adjective: unwieldy

Pronunciation: (un’weel-dee)

Unwieldy meaning:

  • not easily managed, handled or used because of bulk mass, weight, complexity or awkwardness.
  • Very difficult to manipulate or work
  • Lacking grace in movement
  • He almost dropped the unwieldy baggage he received.
  • It’s already unwieldy with almost fifty people with different languages.
  • There’s no question the steroids program is working. I said March 17th and again in May, anyone who tests positive is gone. The process is long, it’s unwieldy, it is what it is. I’ve had a very restless four months. This is a collective bargaining issue.
  • I’m not wedded to any size, although I do think that when you get past twenty to twenty five, you do get unwieldy.
  • It is already apparent that the current system is proving unwieldy and liable to present MP’s with a potentially unsuitable leader while the changes under discussion will severely restrict democracy within the party.
  • My concern was it would be subsumed in this very unwieldy bureaucratic entity.
  • There must be another way to do it. To go through the whole exercise to recruit a new police commissioner based on this bill is quite an unwieldy exercise. Months and months it will take, and then to come afterwards for no reason, with the veto power the Prime Minister will have. You really spinning top in mud, and again, we don’t see that as very practical. The politics getting into the police service is not right.
  • I do not like these unwieldy rules and regulations.
  • She has heaved her unwieldy figure.
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    About Sai Prashanth

    IT professional. Love to write.