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one-sided | meaning of one-sided in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English | LDOCE

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishone-sidedˌone-ˈsided adjective    1 UNFAIRconsidering or showing only one side of a question, subject etc in a way that is unfair  The newspapers give a very one-sided account of the war.2 EQUALan activity or competition that is one-sided is one in which one person or side is much stronger or does much more than the other  a very boring, one-sided game  The conversation was very one-sided.one-sidedly adverbone-sidedness noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpusone-sidedThis interaction of science and theology is not one-sided.Corcoran called the accusations unjust and one-sided.In Georgetown, things were more one-sided.Newspapers often give a very one-sided account of political events.One, the game couldn't have been fixed because it was so utterly one-sided and tedious.I gritted my teeth and decided it wasn't such a one-sided deal after all.It's kind of a one-sided game until the whole field is in shadow.However, this is not an entirely one-sided movement.Finally, she could bear his one-sided possession no longer.Foreign publications have been criticised for alleged one-sided reporting and their correspondents have been denied visas.a one-sided victoryI'm amazed the paper would print such one-sided views.