Advertisement
Advertisement
to be avoided
adjective as in undesirable
Strongest matches
Example Sentences
“On the short list of Trump’s most guiding, abiding beliefs,” it continued, “this is one that ranks near the top: that bad publicity doesn’t have to be avoided, and doesn’t have to be endured—that it should be embraced, and even stoked.”
It is to be avoided everywhere.
Hardships are not to be avoided or fled from at all costs.
“No storm was to be avoided because it appeared too large or too violent,” a senior analyst for that endeavor, the Thunderstorm Project, later said at a meeting of the National Weather Association.
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said "any further military intervention would dramatically aggravate the situation and it has to be avoided".
Advertisement
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse