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: --
Tea fruits with four locules usually have one or two aborted ovules and are hence lopsided (data not shown).
It is seemingly widely accepted that partnership is an admirable initiative moving us on from lopsided power arrangements between health care providers and recipients of that health care.
We don't teach them about the first and third stages; instead, we put too much emphasis on the second stage and thus make them intellectually lopsided.
Kosygin could have explained this lopsided distribution in any number of ways.
The values for skewness and kurtosis show clearly that the distribution is both most lopsided and most concentrated around the middle in 1935, as was expected.
The use of just this phrase to close the piece results in a fairly lopsided structure, with a sense of rushing to tonic closure, rather than a full binary form.
Thus, the regional political leaders (the clients) can easily be convinced that they are given equal treatment or that there is an absence of lopsided distribution.
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.