unhailed

unhailed

(ʌnˈheɪld)
adj
1. not acclaimed
2. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) not saluted
3. not called
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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Henderson is unhailed by some but certainly not his manager Juergen Klopp who, despite increased options, has relied on his captain, and another English midfielder James Milner, throughout this season.
Although Muldoon is described by Simon Collins, writing in 1987, as 'the last New Zealand Keynesian' holder of 'the finance portfolio', (15) 'whose commitment to employment and welfare is largely unhailed', (16) a less rosy picture emerges in regard to his commitment to combatting apartheid.
Let us apply the weak nuclear force to our clothing with the objective of solidifying our full embodiment of eternal power and development, never displaying ourselves as if divided, unhailed, or unstable.
Merely to have her there for the honorary degree was seen by the Jesuit fathers as a large feather in the college's cap--a bit of plumage hard to go unhailed.
Among the pioneers who made the breakthrough was a young Welshman whose contribution still goes largely unhailed in his native country.
It is the author's very middle-aged recollection of a golden boy from Yale in the 50's who was twice the subject of major adulatory pieces in Life magazine, but who led a shadowed life that not only fell short of its glittering early promise but ended in a mostly unhailed suicide.
Many from that silent army of unhailed heroes and heroines have been honoured.
Yet, the savvy buildings professional knows that behind the facade, beneath carpeted floors, ensconced in a building's core, hidden and unhailed, lies an infrastructure that makes that building productive - for those who own it, manage it, and work within it.