How to Use unpunished in a Sentence
unpunished
adjective-
But about 60% of the onboard crimes have gone unpunished, the study found.
— Hugo Martin, chicagotribune.com, 12 Dec. 2019 -
One of its own was killed by a white gang, a murder that has gone unpunished.
— Ira Porter, The Christian Science Monitor, 1 Feb. 2024 -
No good deed goes unpunished in a breakneck movie that will not let up.
— Chris Hewitt, Star Tribune, 29 July 2020 -
But what kind of coach lets a star player linked to murder go unpunished?
— Josh Peter, USA TODAY, 24 Mar. 2023 -
Coupled with that was a cold-eyed ethos of leaving no slight unpunished.
— www.latimes.com, 5 Oct. 2017 -
Of course, now that Westworld’s robots have gone rogue, the Man in Black may not go unpunished in season two.
— Lynda Clark, Smithsonian, 21 Apr. 2018 -
Linares did not want Toledo's killing to go unpunished.
— Fabiola SÁnchez, ajc, 17 Mar. 2022 -
The heinous disregard for Ms. Mooney’s life will not go unpunished.
— Andy Rose, CNN, 23 Feb. 2024 -
But the Ukrainian strikes on Snake Island did not appear to have gone unpunished.
— Laura King, Los Angeles Times, 7 May 2022 -
Biden promised that the U.S., along with its allies and partners, would not let any support for Putin's land grab go unpunished.
— Shannon K. Crawford, ABC News, 30 Sep. 2022 -
Its hero is keenly aware of the unpunished crimes committed by his own precinct.
— Shirley Li, The Atlantic, 20 May 2021 -
Even a below-par French team would not let those numbers go unpunished.
— Daniel Gallan, CNN, 2 Oct. 2019 -
And if that’s the case, this will be yet another unpunished case of racial terrorism.
— Stefani Reynolds, Miami Herald, 13 June 2024 -
For more than 35 years, her killing in coastal South Florida went unpunished.
— Washington Post, 25 Apr. 2021 -
Again, this is the kind of tackle that, before last week, would have been on report and copped a suspension, but which went unpunished at the time.
— Mike Meehall Wood, Forbes, 19 May 2021 -
The coup that did not succeed in overturning the election goes unpunished.
— Mark Danner, The New York Review of Books, 1 July 2021 -
Against a team as stout as Covington Catholic, these types of errors will rarely go unpunished.
— Evan Merrill, The Enquirer, 19 Aug. 2023 -
That doesn’t mean the crimes will go unpunished—the cases will likely end up in state court and they’ll be managed locally.
— Leon Neyfakh, Slate Magazine, 15 May 2017 -
The report noted that most of the abuses have remained unpunished.
— Yuras Karmanau, Star Tribune, 2 July 2021 -
Those horrors, along with other racial crimes, will not go unpunished, Cheeks said.
— Nicholas Rowan, Washington Examiner, 23 June 2020 -
Ramos stepped away from the scene unpunished and Salah soon managed to step up after overcoming the initial pain.
— Rob Harris, Houston Chronicle, 26 May 2018 -
Hundreds of murders such as Ling Sing’s would go unpunished before the statute was repealed in 1872.
— Dan McLaughlin, National Review, 27 Aug. 2020 -
Then, as now, the killer fashions himself as an avenger, bringing justice to those whose crimes have gone unpunished.
— New York Times, 4 June 2018 -
The assault on the Capitol was appalling and the attack on Capitol police cannot go unpunished.
— Carrie Napoleon, chicagotribune.com, 5 Jan. 2022 -
Bodies are everywhere, pushing and pulling and doing all the normal things that go unpunished on Hail Marys at the end of halves.
— Star Tribune, 13 Dec. 2020 -
The same is true in other places where gendered violence tends to go unpunished.
— Alexandra Schwartz, The New Yorker, 5 Feb. 2024 -
Not that the crime should have gone unpunished, but how does this penalty serve the interest of the victims, the criminals or the taxpayers?
— Dp Opinion, The Denver Post, 7 June 2017 -
She was put under house arrest in 2014 because her theft of public funds was too much to go unpunished.
— Kenneth Rapoza, Forbes, 12 Feb. 2023 -
It cannot be allowed to continue; it cannot be allowed to go unpunished.
— Katya Soldak, Forbes, 5 June 2022 -
In fiction, such arrogance rarely goes unpunished, and Long Island Compromise is no exception.
— Adelle Waldman, The Atlantic, 9 July 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unpunished.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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