un-co-ordinatedly
Appearance
English
[edit]Adverb
[edit]un-co-ordinatedly (comparative more un-co-ordinatedly, superlative most un-co-ordinatedly)
- Alternative form of uncoordinatedly.
- 1975, Time-Budgets and Social Activity: Proceedings of the Meeting of the Working Group on Time-Budgets and Social Activity in Toronto, Canada, August, 1974, page 21:
- A time-use survey series, by its scope and hopefully eventually large size, will provide a means of linkage or integration for survey data obtained (or being obtained) un-co-ordinatedly from a number of different sources on individual Canadian activities.
- 1977 September 30, Federal Court Library Study: Report and Recommendations, Washington, D.C.: The Federal Judicial Center, page 96:
- The findings of the Study include the existence of law libraries as to which one could apply the Chief Justice's words, "Haphazard, casual, and un-co-ordinated." Indeed, such has been the growth of the "library system" that serves the federal courts. Now administered by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, the library system of the courts has grown as haphazardly, casually, and un-co-ordinatedly during the last four decades as it did before it was inherited from the United States Department of Justice in 1939.
- 2012, Clement Oloruntusin Akinseloyin, Development Problems in the Niger Delta Region: A Study in Christian Development Ethics (European University Studies, series XXIII (Theology), volume 930), Peter Lang, →ISBN, page 157:
- In his study of the civil society in the region Ikelegbe has pointed out that: [t]he grievances, demand and anger in the region have given rise to the flourishing of civil society. While in the 1970s and 1980s, the communities disparately and un-co-ordinatedly articulated grievances to the MNOCs and blocked access routes to oil installations as pro- tests, civil society emerged in the 1990s as a mobilization platform of popular struggle against the state and MNOCs.