adjective
untoward
uhn-tuu-WAWD
adjective
1
Unfavourable or improper; not what is expected or acceptable.
"Nothing untoward happened during the flight."
"The manager noticed something untoward about the invoice."
2
Difficult to control or manage.
"The untoward child refused to sit still for the photo."
How to Use Untoward
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishSomething out of place, improper, or unlucky — often used in the negative, as in "nothing untoward."
Common mistake
Almost always paired with "nothing" or "anything" in modern usage; rarely used to praise something.
Common pairings
nothing untoward
an untoward incident
untoward behaviour
Word Forms
more untoward comparative, most untoward superlative
Study it as flashcards or scroll it in Flow — saved to your collection.
Test yourself on “untoward”
A quick quiz — meaning, synonyms & usage
→
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
Nothing _____ happened during the flight.
Etymology
From un- (\"not\") plus toward, originally meaning heading in the wrong direction.