How to Use unremarked in a Sentence

unremarked

adjective
  • These are not events that could have passed unremarked in Europe at large.
    Marilynne Robinson, New Republic, 12 Dec. 2017
  • These events largely passed unremarked due to the onslaught of Covid-19 news.
    Jerrine Tan, Wired, 29 Apr. 2020
  • This leaves Charlie free to cut the head off a dead pigeon and make a doll out of it, which also goes unremarked.
    Tasha Robinson, The Verge, 8 June 2018
  • The Fed wasn’t the only entity that allowed the scale of SVB’s problems to go unremarked.
    Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 13 Mar. 2023
  • Of course, the game industry is not yet at a place where a female lead can go unremarked upon.
    Todd Martens, Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2019
  • One of the more modest efforts, almost unremarked upon at the time, was the IBNS.
    T. Christian Miller, ProPublica, 20 Dec. 2019
  • The human toll has gone largely unremarked upon in western countries absorbed by the wave of deaths in places like Italy, Spain and the United States.
    Kareem Fahim, Washington Post, 10 Apr. 2020
  • The document went unremarked; its existence is revealed here for the first time.
    Murray Waas, The New York Review of Books, 17 Aug. 2020
  • Just look at New York City, where one of the largest spikes in anti-Semitic hate crimes tells a different story yet has gone largely unremarked upon.
    Robert Cherry, National Review, 9 Sep. 2019
  • The Sussex version arrived at the West Sussex archives unremarked in the 1950s in a batch of legal documents.
    CBS News, 7 July 2018
  • And the airport’s other nods to its role in the tragedy — American flags that fly above the jetways at the gates where the flights departed — go mostly unnoticed and unremarked.
    BostonGlobe.com, 9 Sep. 2021
  • But the brilliance of this technique is largely going unremarked.
    Chris Jones, chicagotribune.com, 4 May 2018
  • Al-Qaeda would probably not let the death of a senior commander like Abu Mustafa pass unremarked.
    Evan Hansen, WIRED, 22 Oct. 2009
  • The world’s greatest Cantonese chef then bums a cigarette from chef Leung, twists his colleague’s ear with a smile, and heads out on to the crowded Kowloon streets, unnoticed and unremarked.
    Casey Quackenbush / Hong Kong, Time, 12 July 2018
  • The morning routine at your house proves as much: Your brother’s appearance goes unremarked, while everyone gets a vote on yours.
    Philip Galanes, New York Times, 14 June 2018
  • But Silver’s avowed faith in the potential of the game to unite people was generally unremarked upon.
    Louisa Thomas, The New Yorker, 22 Oct. 2019
  • Their killings have gone relatively unremarked, lost in the noise of a deadly wave of American gun violence.
    Nathan Solis, Los Angeles Times, 17 May 2023
  • That bleach blonde braid and flawless eyeliner cannot go unremarked upon, either!
    Emily Dixon, Marie Claire, 7 Apr. 2021
  • In fact, one of the most powerful statements from his sophomore collection was carried, not worn, down the runway and went largely unremarked upon by most fans and even critics: the quilts.
    Lili Göksenin, GQ, 20 Sep. 2017
  • My momos are gargoyles, even after an hour of practice, which kindly goes unremarked upon by Aruna and Nasrin.
    Grant Cornett, Vogue, 17 Aug. 2018
  • Left unremarked upon because of the Steelers detour was that the Bears had shifted into a trick formation with Trubisky far off to the left on second and 10 at the Jacksonville 26 early in the fourth quarter.
    Phil Rosenthal, chicagotribune.com, 28 Dec. 2020
  • There was literally nothing for him here on Earth but to die, unremembered and unremarked on.
    Andrew Liptak, The Verge, 25 Mar. 2018
  • One of the most remarkable — yet unremarked — aspects of the Iraq debate is that for all the errors that plagued U.S. policy in 2003 and after, this goal may actually still be reachable.
    Hal Brands, National Review, 20 June 2019
  • For the residents of these blocks, shootings and murders have become a reality of everyday life, even if such tragedies go unremarked.
    Drew Holden, National Review, 28 July 2021
  • Other than once a year when the royal accounts are opened, the financial setup of the monarchy usually goes by largely unremarked upon.
    Victoria Murphy, Town & Country, 22 Dec. 2020
  • There appears to be an acrostic that has been hitherto unremarked upon and that is so resonant with its location in the text as to be very likely deliberate.
    BostonGlobe.com, 6 Nov. 2019
  • And as Stewart observes, these basic acts of predation go largely unremarked because the point of much mainstream economic thinking is to conceal them.
    Chris Lehmann, The New Republic, 30 Sep. 2021
  • It’s the city that ends up looking big, a bustling but precarious place where someone’s disappearance could go unremarked upon for days, ascribed to a bender, or a hot hooking, or a bout of depression.
    Alison Willmore, Vulture, 30 Oct. 2021
  • Instead the milestone was relegated to a lone figure at the bottom of a government press release and went unremarked by anti-tobacco groups that have spent decades working to stamp out youth smoking.
    Matthew Perrone, SFChronicle.com, 21 Nov. 2019
  • At times of better relations between Beijing and Washington, military transits such as the one in the Taiwan Strait might have gone largely unremarked upon.
    Meredith Oyen, The Conversation, 6 June 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unremarked.' 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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