Adjective
unaligned (comparative more unaligned, superlative most unaligned)
Not aligned
And why should we, of all people, expect the proud new developing nations to see the world precisely as we see it? Was any new nation ever more outspoken, independent and unaligned than the young America of Jefferson, Jackson, and Lincoln? Chester Bowles
The long labor of peace is an undertaking for every nation - and in this effort none of us can remain unaligned. To this goal none can be uncommitted. John F. Kennedy
A new actor that rose to prominence in the 1980s was the charismatic celebrity unaligned with home economists or any other professional group. Source: Internet
For Northern Ireland's second largest city, broadcasting outlets which are unaligned to either community and broadcast to both use both names interchangeably, often starting a report with "Londonderry" and then using "Derry" in the rest of the report. Source: Internet
Gaetz later admitted that he had made mistakes as head of the Senate’s redistricting effort, including not putting political operatives under oath when they appeared before his committee claiming they were unaligned members of the public. Source: Internet
As the structures have been designed with unaligned members, this "both endian" encoding does however not help implementors as the data structures need to be read byte-wise to convert them to properly aligned data. Source: Internet