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dispassion

[ UK /dɪspˈæʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. objectivity and detachment
    her manner assumed a dispassion and dryness very unlike her usual tone

How To Use dispassion In A Sentence

  • She would have given a great deal to be able to recall dispassionately all they had said and done that night. Ship Of Magic
  • The tone of Nicholls' biography is dispassionately respectful, admiring even.
  • These may be true, but these are arguments that appeal to the dispassionate mind of a judge, not the emotional public fervor.
  • Viewed dispassionately, the empirical evidence does not support such a position.
  • The gods are dispassionate, jealous, vainly superior, and sometimes unfair and bitter.
  • Will was calm and dispassionate in stating something that is demonstrably false.
  • If any thing has fallen under your observation, either on the one side or the other, I intreat you to lay it totally aside; to come to the consideration of this subject with cool, dispassionate, unprejudiced, unprepossessed minds, to attend to the evidence that will be laid before you, and to that evidence alone -- by that evidence let the Defendants stand or fall. The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane, commonly called Lord Cochrane, the Hon. Andrew Cochrane Johnstone, Richard Gathorne Butt, Ralph Sandom, Alexander M'Rae, John Peter Holloway, and Henry Lyte for A Conspiracy In the Court of
  • My friends at BGS had advised me about this aspect of a genealogical road trip: keeping your genealogically dispassionate companions happy while you pursue the family history trail. Shaking the Family Tree
  • Once again we are invited to pick with hawk-eyed dispassion through the secrets of a rich, cruel family. Times, Sunday Times
  • How these professionals can remain dispassionate and impartial in their job I will never know.
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