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fair-minded

ADJECTIVE
  1. of a person; just and impartial; not prejudiced

How To Use fair-minded In A Sentence

  • And what always troubled me was that David Brock pretended that he, too, was a meticulous, fair-minded investigative reporter who went back and looked at the story in a disimpassioned way. CNN Transcript Jun 30, 2001
  • He appears in his work to be a literate and fair-minded person.
  • - What, Janet asked herself, did the magazine's fair-minded, noble, and spirited disdain for McCarthyism mean if it did not mean action? ISAAC CAMPION
  • His "killingly fair-minded and viciously funny" review of the Pulitzer prize-winning author Michael Cunningham's latest book, By Nightfall, has won novelist and critic Adam Mars-Jones the inaugural Hatchet Job of the Year award. Review of The Hours author's latest book wins inaugural hatchet job award
  • Adam Mars-Jones's review … was at once erudite, attentive, killingly fair-minded and viciously funny. Review of The Hours author's latest book wins inaugural hatchet job award
  • And it undermines our international reputation as a fair-minded nation.
  • Patrick Smith's "Passage to Peking" Oxford University Press, 591 pages, $34.95 , an acerbic and fair-minded study, examines an obscure historical episode from 1954, when left-wing sympathizers from the Labour Party set off to visit Mao's China, a trip that would likely never have taken place if not for what Mr. Smith calls the "affronted patriotism" of the British in the face of American power. They Never Got Over Yorktown
  • But there are elements in the story that should give fair-minded observers reason to pause.
  • Thus far it seems to me that no fair-minded person could properly object.
  • It's time for highlights, and the fair-minded Director reminds, I'm usually drawn to classic, timeless looks, but I can be adventurous if a piece really catches my eye. Anisha Lakhani: Stephanie Winston Wolkoff's Wonderland: NYFW 2011 Reflections and Fashion at Lincoln Center Projections
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