unlevel

unlevel

(ʌnˈlɛvəl)
adj
1. not level
2. unfair or inequitable; giving one person or group an unfair advantage: an unlevel playing field.
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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But there is nothing 'advanced' at all about the unfair and unlevel playing field created by Brazilian trade barriers.
BANK OF ENGLAND OFFICIAL CALLS FOR FUNDS REFORM Reform of controversial investment funds like those run by Neil Woodford could even up an "unlevel playing field" sucking capital away from more productive areas of the economy, Alex Brazier, a leading Bank of England official said yesterday.
"While no mass exodus from China is expected, continued tensions in the US-China relationship, an unlevel playing field, and simmering retaliatory actions by Chinese authorities against American companies are creating an increasingly uncertain commercial environment," the group added.
class="font-size--16 MsoNormalThere was "an unlevel playing field", observers said, without giving further details.
Tax havens and outright tax evasion contribute to an unlevel playing field where income and wealth is redistributed from the bottom of the social pyramid to the top.
Block piers are exceptionally simple to work with when your shed is being built on site and can accommodate some significantly unlevel ground.
The governor noted US President Donald Trump's trade policy had not been completely wrong.""And I'll take China as an example, which has benefited enormously from playing on an unlevel playing field - Trump's been right about that."
FUW president Glyn Roberts said the proposals will create an unlevel playing field within the UK.
They cite the transition provision of the bill identifying the members of the BTC, mostly MILF, as the interim governing body that will 'unlevel' the playing field once elections ensue.