Unconditional in a sentence as an adjective

Mostly, it's about the people they're trying to hire: status-hungry kids with an unconditional work ethic.

An unconditional basic income[1] would speed up a paradigm shift from the current "work or starve" society.

"Genuine, unconditional love is a gift that must be freely given and freely accepted, with nothing expected in return.

"Their own certitude of the pretexts upon which they saw me seemed to render them incapable of unconditional love.

Is it obvious that this distribution conditioned on Z=1 is different from the unconditional one?

Delawa said: The idea of unconditional income comes from the failure of conditional programmes.

By giving money directly to those impacted, the poor are empowered to save and concentrate their unconditional small wealth into larger pools and wield power of a sort.

Two random comments:First, the NYT is engaging in the standard Brooksian/Friedmanist technique of supporting something with apparent qualifications, but actually engaging in unconditional support.

I'm earning 20%-30% more as a teacher than I did as a developer\n - 2 weeks paid paternity leave\n - 14 weeks paid maternity leave\n - 22 hours of class time per week\n - Tight unfair dismissal laws\n - Ongoing unconditional pay increases that outpace inflation.\n\n\n"...corporations have been gaining more and more power over their employees.

Unconditional definitions

adjective

not conditional; "unconditional surrender"

See also: unconditioned

adjective

not modified or restricted by reservations; "a categorical denial"; "a flat refusal"

See also: categoric categorical flat

adjective

not contingent; not determined or influenced by someone or something else