0 (of a person) not friendly and pleasant: --
In this period the religious climate proved uncongenial to such ideas.
My liking for a bargain enables me to overlook uncongenial retail surroundings.
He found post-war college life uncongenial, and after two terms decided that it would be better to earn a living.
Unfortunately I found him almost as uncongenial as his sister.
The type of underground work is uncongenial, and will continue so unless improvements in living and working conditions keep pace with those in other industries.
It is uncongenial to raise this point in time of war, but it is of course a fact.
There are no sheep-dogs trying to drive us into an uncongenial fold.
Those ideas were highly uncongenial at the time, largely neglected and resisted.
They give of their best in services and skill, often under uncongenial conditions, sometimes very dangerous conditions, where there is even risk to life itself.
Some find that uncongenial and leave; but we cannot have it both ways.
There are 20 unregistered dockers who work uncongenial hours because it is a tidal port.
It is painful to see our forces discharging so honourably tasks so uncongenial to soldiers.