How to Use unstudied in a Sentence
unstudied
adjective- She moved with an unstudied grace.
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The notes had lain, unstudied, for decades as the vampire went global.
—Sam Knight, The New Yorker, 13 Oct. 2023
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There is more to learn by adding new, unstudied population groups.
—Zané Lombard, Quartz Africa, 25 Nov. 2020
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The decor is deliberately unstudied, paired with the low thrum of hip-hop.
—Sophie Dening, Condé Nast Traveler, 27 Oct. 2021
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The rest are nameless and unstudied—part of what biologists call dark taxa.
—Marion Renault, The Atlantic, 29 Sep. 2025
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But giving patients unproven and unstudied treatments puts them at risk.
—NBC News, 23 Mar. 2020
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Most people don’t have occasion to think about the many unstudied species of animals who live on the seafloor.
—Popular Science, 2 June 2020
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The spacecraft will take a close look at the sun's poles, which are a relatively unstudied region of the star.
—Jennifer Leman, Popular Mechanics, 16 July 2020
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Like the vast majority of fossils pulled from the earth, the teeth sat unstudied in a museum for decades.
—Gemma Tarlach, Discover Magazine, 18 June 2019
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But grasses growing far beneath the waves often go unstudied compared to those closer to shore.
—Chris Stirewalt, Fox News, 13 Apr. 2018
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And in one cabinet, there are the final six pristine moon samples, still unsealed and unstudied.
—CBS News, 12 July 2019
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Her book works because her blank verse, with its seemingly unstudied enjambments, is supple yet pared down.
—Dwight Garner, New York Times, 14 Mar. 2017
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That’s because, for all its testosterone rage, the band violated the notion that to be male is to be steady, unstudied, and tough.
—Spencer Kornhaber, The Atlantic, 25 June 2018
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Over time, these chimneys create rich deposits of minerals as well as rich, unstudied ecosystems.
—Eliza Gkritsi, WIRED, 12 Jan. 2024
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At this crucial continental juncture sits Arabia—a vast stretch of land that long went unstudied.
—Maya Wei-Haas, National Geographic, 17 Sep. 2020
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But the purpose of such behavior has, until now, largely remained unstudied.
—Brendan Rascius, Miami Herald, 2 May 2024
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With a penchant for bright colors and patterns, Vogue’s latest cover star is a paragon of unstudied, downtown style.
—Sarah Spellings, Vogue, 14 Dec. 2020
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The procedure itself is painful, and the results vary from person to person for unknown and unstudied reasons.
—Quinn Norton, WIRED, 7 June 2006
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Hadid styled the outfit with her usual unstudied flair, throwing on modish ankle boots, chunky rings, and oversize hoop earrings.
—Madeline Fass, Vogue, 9 Oct. 2018
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The luxury of the everyday, its unstudied elegance, is a constant in his vision.
—Stellene Volandes, Town & Country, 12 Sep. 2017
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Thousands of genes are understudied or unstudied, and not all genetic conditions have tests.
—Caitlin Harrington, Wired, 30 July 2020
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But the question of how underground hotspots could affect urban infrastructure has gone largely unstudied.
—Allison Parshall, Scientific American, 11 July 2023
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Over the last two decades, lawmakers have paid to bolster police presence in schools, a largely unstudied solution, to prevent gun violence.
—CNN, 17 June 2020
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All schools showed low degrees of transmission, for which the report credited the only unstudied pillar, the masking policy.
—Tom Nicholson, WSJ, 8 July 2021
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It was collected in Morocco in 1999, but went unstudied until now.
—Gemma Tarlach, Discover Magazine, 1 Jan. 2019
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Do juvenile actors do what adult actors do—some combination of craft and instinct—or is there something unstudied about them that belongs in a category all its own?
—Michael Schulman, The New Yorker, 30 Nov. 2021
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Like Marley, Rihanna is possessed of an unstudied yet wholly electrifying sense of cool.
—Chioma Nnadi, Vogue, 3 May 2018
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The site was soon closed and remained unstudied until anthropologists returned to the chamber in 2004.
—Nicholas St. Fleur, New York Times, 2 June 2017
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Unlike Yellowstone wolves, which are usually viewed through a spotting scope a mile away, they were uncollared, uncatalogued on any pack chart, unstudied.
—Peter Heller, Condé Nast Traveler, 7 Sep. 2022
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With visits to remote, largely unstudied areas scientists hope to find untapped strains of cacao that may hold the keys to protect chocolate farms from some of their most damaging enemies.
—Lindzi Wessel, Discover Magazine, 27 Sep. 2018
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unstudied.' 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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