- a word derived from European.
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
But the fashion industry wasn’t always so enamored with looking American, whether narrowly defined as WASP-y or broadly characterized as un-European.
From Slate • Jul. 10, 2015
Jean-Claude Juncker, the Prime Minister of Luxembourg, recently accused Germany of being "un-European."
From Time • Feb. 28, 2011
In the process, a reluctant Berlin has been called irresponsible, selfish, even un-European.
From New York Times • May 3, 2010
The dispatch reported that Willy Brandt had just told a rally of his Social Democratic Party that De Gaulle, far from being a friend, was a "power-thirsty old man" obsessed by "rigid, un-European ideas."
From Time Magazine Archive
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The Pasha was too surprised, at first, to move—and too conscious of the eyes of servants, too uncertain of what he should do, too fearful of doing the wrong, the un-European, thing.
From Atlantic Narratives Modern Short Stories by Ashe, Elizabeth