How to Use unreconciled in a Sentence

unreconciled

adjective
  • Her unreconciled — or ignored — racial past has now become my own to carry.
    Benje Williams, Longreads, 15 Mar. 2022
  • There is a provision for a delay if there are unreconciled errors or a county has not yet reported its results.
    Amy Gardner, Star Tribune, 20 Nov. 2020
  • Yet these two nations are among the great unreconciled of the 20th century’s warring parties.
    The Economist, 7 Sep. 2017
  • But the fighting never really stopped, an unreconciled history on a frozen landscape.
    Nils Adler, Los Angeles Times, 21 Jan. 2022
  • But such a personal journey, stretched between unreconciled pasts and futures cut short, is not easily translated into a film.
    Savina Petkova, Variety, 7 Mar. 2024
  • The only true hallmark of Bucks basketball this season is that both of these extremes will go unmitigated and unreconciled.
    Rob Mahoney, SI.com, 30 Mar. 2018
  • There is a genuine pathos in the vision of a man who has achieved power but remains unreconciled to himself, who soothes his way past his own rages and agonies by listening to the song of a homeless alley cat.
    Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker, 4 Oct. 2021
  • Thereafter, an unreconciled Mr Sanders would become a general-election problem for Democrats.
    The Economist, 15 Aug. 2019
  • The tensions between Kenny and Lee dominated the storyline for two weeks with an unreconciled ending.
    Robin M. Boylorn, Slate Magazine, 8 Aug. 2017
  • The remains are the unreconciled legacy of a grisly practice in which body parts were scavenged from graveyards, battlefields, hospitals and morgues in more than 80 countries.
    Andrew Ba Tran, Washington Post, 14 Aug. 2023
  • Although beaten, Hannibal remained unreconciled to the triumph of Roman arms.
    James Romm, WSJ, 7 July 2017
  • The remains are the unreconciled legacy of a grisly practice in which bodies and organs were taken from graveyards, battlefields, morgues and hospitals in more than 80 countries.
    Claire Healy, Washington Post, 14 Aug. 2023
  • Weeks of negotiations resulted in little headway, with major differences on costs and taxes going unreconciled.
    USA Today, 9 June 2021
  • The subsequent public infighting among cabinet members shows that many disputes surrounding Brexit are still unreconciled.
    Andrew Hammond and, WSJ, 21 Sep. 2017
  • Even among followers of Christ, God's great story of reconciliation has been crippled because the messengers of that story are unreconciled.
    Lucas Ramirez, Fox News, 24 June 2018
  • Bale, who plays a journalist, Arthur, with deep, unreconciled connections to the glitter-rock explosion, sells the flashback completely, transforming into a geeky teenager by dint of sheer conviction.
    Joshua Rothkopf, EW.com, 1 July 2022
  • Sixty years after Wigner wrote his essay, quantum mechanics and relativity remain unreconciled.
    John Horgan, Scientific American, 7 Jan. 2021
  • Other pitfalls include variable interest entities that should have been consolidated, inconsistent alignment of chart of accounts, and unreconciled accounts.
    Forbes, 3 Jan. 2023
  • Left unmentioned is the fact that Lincoln’s First Inaugural, however artful legally, had left seceding states unpersuaded and unreconciled.
    Harold Holzer, WSJ, 29 July 2018
  • The idea that the unreconciled trauma of the father, celebrated film director Gustav Borg (Stellan Skarsgård), is something carried by his estranged daughters, in particular the actress Nora (Renate Reinsve), presented Trier with a screenwriting challenge.
    Chris O'Falt, IndieWire, 21 Dec. 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unreconciled.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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