Committed vs Unpledged - What's the difference?
committed | unpledged |
(commit)
Obligated by a pledge to some course of action.
showing commitment.
Associated in an exclusive (but not necessarily permanent) sexual relationship.
(rhetoric) Required by logic to endorse the conclusion of an argument.
Not pledged; not committed.
*{{quote-news, year=2008, date=February 13, author=Adam Nagourney, title=With Surge in Momentum, Obama Makes His Case, work=New York Times
, passage=That has provided Mr. Obama with the opportunity, which he plans to seize in a more full-throated way starting on Wednesday, to argue that voters across a wide cross-section of the country have embraced his candidacy, and that the time has come for the group that could hold the balance of power, those 796 unpledged superdelegates — party leaders and elected officials who have an automatic seat at the national convention — to follow suit. }}
(finance) Not used as collateral.
As adjectives the difference between committed and unpledged
is that committed is obligated by a pledge to some course of action while unpledged is not pledged; not committed.As a verb committed
is (commit).committed
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)unpledged
English
Adjective
(-)citation
- With no unpledged assets and low profitability, the business could get no further financing.
