Inimical in a sentence as an adjective

Because no matter if it's good, it will be inimical.

Such a legal theory is rather inimical to the business of news.

That sort of attitude would be inimical to what he, Gandhi, and Nelson Mandela would have advocated.

Fortunately these goals aren't inimical; in fact, the more contentious the discussion, the less learning gets done.

But they take it for granted that they have to practice to succeed, while in math we have almost reached an attitude that practice is inimical to understanding.

"I'm not surprised, per se, but rather always amazed whenever I hear stories of rich people acting in ways inimical to their economic interests.

Google could release their CDM for any operating system they choose; it doesn't alter the fact that EME and CDM are inimical to the Open Web and should be rejected by the W3C.

" It's inimical to civic and democratic political processes in a free society.

It is inimical to the interests of any large state actor to allow actual, real privacy since that could harbor elements trying overthrow that very same state.

But the drive to get eyeballs on ads is inimical to insight; it encourages facile, superficial, and above all speedy publication with a smattering of titillating headlines to draw the readers in.

Or would nonviolent activism and speech asking that such a person not be allowed to represent that company, and that someone with such views should not be honored but repudiated, be "inimical" to their philosophies?I don't presume to know what King or Gandhi would have done.

Detroit became a one-industry city and that industry demanded a large, mostly unskilled workforce inimical to the kind of entrepreneurial activity that might otherwise have diversified Detroit's economy.

It includes the power of not grasping analogies, of failing to perceive logical errors, of misunderstanding the simplest arguments if they are inimical to Ingsoc, and of being bored or repelled by any train of thought which is capable of leading in a heretical direction.

Inimical definitions

adjective

not friendly; "an unfriendly act of aggression"; "an inimical critic"

See also: unfriendly