un ‧ fa ‧ vour ‧ a ‧ ble BrE AmE British English , unfavorable American English /ʌnˈfeɪv ə rəb ə l/ adjective
1 . unfavourable conditions, situations etc are not good:
unfavourable circumstances
2 . if someone’s reaction or attitude to something is unfavourable, they do not like it:
unfavourable reviews
unfavourable publicity
Careless spelling mistakes in a letter can create an unfavourable impression.
—unfavourably adverb
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THESAURUS
▪ bad not good:
a bad idea
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His behaviour is getting worse.
▪ poor not as good as it could be or should be:
A poor diet can lead to ill health.
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his poor performance at school
▪ not very good not good – often used instead of saying directly that something was ‘bad’, especially when you were disappointed by it:
The film wasn’t very good.
▪ disappointing not as good as you hoped or expected:
Her exam results were disappointing.
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a disappointing start to the campaign
▪ negative bad – used when talking about the bad result or effect of something:
All the publicity had a negative impact on sales.
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the negative effects of climate change
▪ undesirable formal bad and not wanted:
The policy had some undesirable consequences.
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drug abuse and other undesirable behaviour
▪ unfavourable formal unfavourable conditions are not good for doing something:
The boat race was cancelled because of unfavourable weather.