0 with one side bigger, higher, etc. than the other; not equally balanced:
1 with one side or part much bigger or higher than the other; uneven:
Exceedingly lopsided distributions of resources can bring dissatisfaction, revolt or ethnic strife.
As indicated under ' features of clientelism', the patron avoids lopsided distribution of resources.
The purely strategic outcome is even more lopsided and skewed than the purely sincere one.
The west, on the other hand, was up for grabs, and the northern vote was too fragmented to produce a lopsided outcome.
Like the now outdated intromission ideas about vision, the impression of external laws into our visual system appears lopsided.
This lopsided evidence has not been a concern for any of the earlier accounts.
Contemporary demographic data illustrate the lopsided distribution of theistic belief.
The point of its draft system is to ensure that talent is not all siphoned off by a few teams, making competition between the teams lopsided.