dispassionately

[ UK /dɪspˈæʃənətli/ ]
[ US /dɪˈspæʃənətɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in an impartially dispassionate manner
    although he was looking at the other girl, he did so dispassionately
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How To Use dispassionately 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
  • Each side is hell-bent on refuting the other's arguments, rather than examining them dispassionately.
  • Once emotions enter into the equation, any ability to dispassionately judge the value of an item is easily lost. Lighten Up
  • Local politics is something they were devoting much of their lives to, yet they could be dispassionately analytical about this part of themselves.
  • Obama came from a completely different background, which surely equips him to understand and feel pain of other similarly situated people, but he also appears to be a cool clinician as he dispassionately dissects people's pain with the result that he gets far too little credit for understanding and truly sympathizing. Frank A. Weil: Working With Roosevelt
  • She is a consummate journalist - the facts are all here, and clearly and dispassionately explained.
  • This perspective allows her to observe any dilemma dispassionately and solve problems that go beyond linear logic. New Action Girl Comic: Masquerade
  • although he was looking at the other girl, he did so dispassionately
  • The reader who reads science fiction dispassionately is likely to be struck by how closely the human imagination is tied to reality, even when it deliberately sets out to violate it. January 2007
  • Each side is hell-bent on refuting the other's arguments, rather than examining them dispassionately.
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