Having an oblique or slanting direction or position.
1One particular paragraph stands out as a prime example of skewed thinking.
2Nixon skewed the process, however, by substituting political ideology for judicial independence.
3The Labour and Greens parties said that advice was skewed and wrong.
4Many U.S. companies' reported results have been skewed by the law's impact.
5Five minutes after that, another skewed shot flew a long way over.
6Even rural seats in western NSW were relatively strongly skewed to Yes.
7Criticism has also focused on the heavily Māori-skewed statistics for police chases.
8What if Charlie Redmond hadn't skewed that early penalty high and wide?
9Chances were, she'd get some delusional perspective, some skewed vision of reality.
10Brahimi skewed wide but would not wait long for something more substantial.
11In any case, for many conservatives, the whole system is unfairly skewed.
12The work is too skewed and surreal to spring from everyday experience.
13Stuff's chief executive Sinead Boucher said the package was skewed towards broadcasters.
14Draghi said the risks to that outlook were skewed to the downside.
15Incentives to increase lending are skewed towards small and medium sized enterprises.
16In Mexico, it said irrigation subsidies were skewed towards the biggest farmers.
Sobre este termo
skewed
skew Verbo
Indicativo · Pretérito perfeito
Skewed nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América