51³Ô¹Ï

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unmet

[ uhn-met ]

adjective

  1. not responded to adequately; not satisfied or fulfilled, as a need, expectation, challenge, etc.:

    Migrant health centers could address an important unmet need for health services among farmworkers and their families.

  2. (of a minimum amount) not reached:

    If the production line is disrupted, the result will be everything from defective products to unmet quotas.

  3. not personally or physically encountered:

    This is an essay on my longtime, unmet friend, the mystic Thomas Merton.

  4. (of a traveler) not greeted or picked up on arrival:

    Outside the terminal, pushy taxi drivers were vying to get the few unmet passengers into decrepit taxis.



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51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins

Origin of unmet1

First recorded before 1100; un- 1( def ) + met ( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Rickey’s energy is harmless yet seems mysteriously pained by unmet expectations, as when he gently admonishes Glenn: “Loosen up, you haven’t said anything funny.â€

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Today, renovated to the highest standards, those hotels leave no guest's wish unmet.

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Dr McCullough said he accepted that all services were under pressure, and "what we're trying to do is meet an unmet need with a limited resource and we need to make best use of what is available for these patients".

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Those who go on to use it away from social settings are often doing so "to self-medicate unmet mental health support needs such as anxiety and trauma", says the author of the report, Robert Ralphs, a professor of criminology and social policy at Manchester Metropolitan University.

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He adds that reclassification "will not deter young people from using it if their underlying mental health and wellbeing needs continue to be unmet".

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