Synonym: unjust. Similar words: fairly, affair, fair play, unfold, in fact, infant, faint, in favour of. Meaning: [ʌnˈfeə] adj. 1. showing favoritism 2. not fair; marked by injustice or partiality or deception.
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151. By contrast, industrial tribunals in the exercise of the unfair dismissal jurisdiction are concerned with disputes between employee and employer.
152. There were only a very few complaints about unfair treatment from staff, but many about antipathy from male students.
153. One point to clear up immediately is the widespread confusion between wrongful dismissal and unfair dismissal.
154. Salary caps are imposed to prevent richer clubs gaining an unfair advantage over poorer rivals by offering players vastly inflated salaries.
155. The process of conciliation in unfair dismissal cases serves two purposes.
156. Mr Gleeson said it would be unfair to suggest the cash injection had something to do with the forthcoming General Election.
157. Salary caps are imposed to prevent richer clubs gaining an unfair advantage over poorer rivals by offering players inflated salaries.
158. Anyone who believes they have been subject to unfair dismissal can complain to an industrial tribunal.
159. But his friend assured him that there would be nothing unfair about a story which reported the address-book and country-club connections.
160. That would be detrimental to children in my constituency, unfair to parents and unacceptable to me.
161. The freedom to limit liability was curtailed by the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977.
162. Because the indemnity basis may produce unfair results in certain cases.
163. The employee may thus bring an unfair dismissal complaint or claim a redundancy payment.
164. Practical implications Almost all constructive dismissal cases involve an unfair dismissal claim.
165. Employees need legal protection against capricious and unfair actions by their employers.
166. It's unfair competition and unfair to the customer as well.
167. It is impossibly complex, outrageously expensive, overly intrusive(http://Sentencedict.com), economically destructive and manifestly unfair.
168. Propensity to take an unfair advantage of available opportunities by those who lead the change.
169. It is unfair, however, to expect nurses to take on this new role and responsibility without adequate training and supervision.
170. Unfortunately, some policyholders were inadequately insured, thus imposing an unfair burden on all the others.
171. Whenever possible, try to correct unfair situations, not just walk away from them.
172. No legal framework prevails to enable disabled people to counteract discrimination, unfair employment practices, problems of access, etc.
173. Under the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 any exemption clauses in the rules must be reasonable.
174. Such dismissals may lead to claims for unfair dismissal and/or redundancy payments.
175. The author does not open into how unfair comment?
176. The indignant theorist casts aspersions on their methods, inserts a non sequitur regarding its effects and explains how this is frightfully unfair for the "little guy".
177. The European Commission has no doubt that cantonal tax schemes qualify as subsidies because they offer an unfair tax advantage to companies in Switzerland for profits generated in the EU.
178. Contrary to the claims of Yglesias, Krugman, and the Social Security Administration, I don't think the "Ponzi scheme" charge is unfair in the slightest.
179. That may be an unfair characterisation of the recent news from crisis-stricken Latvia, but it is pretty much how outsiders see it.
180. The fourth part is the legal consideration about perfects the law against unfair competition.