How To Use Impartial In A Sentence

  • Moreover, she is being asked to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals, tariffs and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a great deal of feeling and perhaps some bitterness, but do you not all agree with me that it is quite possible, since there is a fashion of armament in Europe, and since there has been no withdrawal on the part of the Admiralty from the stand taken by the First Lord some months ago, to have the entire Canadian people approach this situation in a calm and in an impartial manner? Canada and the Empire
  • The BBC must ensure that due impartiality is preserved in its news programmes.
  • Still less can they accept impartial public broadcasting combined with a biased press and biased satellite television.
  • The broadcasting media are statutorily required to be impartial.
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  • An adjudicator must be, and must be seen to be, disinterested, unbiased and impartial.
  • In itself that is no objection provided the witness is fair and impartial.
  • We offer impartial advice on tax and insurance.
  • Williams 'position, here, is compatible with the claim that the impartialist considerations actually obtain in this case. Moral Reasoning
  • Judges are supposed to be impartial and immune to influence or prejudice from outside the courtroom. The Sun
  • The council today insisted the licensing committee included cross-party representation and would be impartial.
  • `Have I come here to listen to you being impartial and fair-minded ? MURDER MOVES IN
  • I shall count my country _lost_, in the loss of the primitive _principles_, and the primitive _practices_, upon which it was at first established: but certainly one good way to save that _loss_, would be to do something, that the memory of _the great things done for us by our God_, may not be _lost_, and that the story of the circumstances attending the _foundation_ and _formation_ of this country, and of its _preservation_ hitherto, may be impartially handed unto posterity. Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader Being Selections from the Chief American Writers
  • They have a moral responsibility to be impartial and to show that they are impartial.
  • The truth of all popular traditions as to the healing power of herbs will be tried impartially as soon as men again desire to lead healthy lives; but I shall not in 'Proserpina' retain any of the names of their gathered and dead or distilled substance, but name them always from the characters of their life. Proserpina, Volume 2 Studies Of Wayside Flowers
  • The media can contribute significantly by taking a responsible and impartial stance on conflicts and violence.
  • However the process of making a planning decision must not only be fair and impartial but must be seen to be so.
  • The moon cools your emotions so you can give a relative or close friend the impartial advice that really helps. The Sun
  • Above all, he must be seen by all political groupings to be unaligned and impartial.
  • (Godwin's, for example) might be referred to as strict impartialist theories. Impartiality
  • Sympathy is the easy option but the moon cools emotions so you can give a relative, or close friend, the impartial advice that helps so much more. The Sun
  • Careers officers offer impartial advice to all pupils.
  • Impartial rule theory, casuistry, and virtue ethics are all consistent with rather than rivals of a principle-based account when it is properly conceived.
  • President, regarding these appointments; but the verdict of army and people was that _these first_ selections were made with as much judgment and impartiality as the untried state of the army permitted. Four Years in Rebel Capitals An Inside View of Life in the Southern Confederacy from Birth to Death
  • Now we are much better known as the place to go for impartial employment advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • How these professionals can remain dispassionate and impartial in their job I will never know.
  • He has vowed to oversee the elections impartially.
  • I think I must leave others to decide for themselves on the point, as my judgement may not be considered to be impartial.
  • Moreover, she is being asked to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals, tariffs and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • Impartial third party status is a non-profit public welfare institutions.
  • And to draw the last of my title quaternity into the discussion, Edward Tufte proposes as a “grand truth about human behvior that, as Van Wyck Brooks said, “It is a principle that shines impartially on the just and the unjust that once you have a point of view all history will back you up.” AKMA’s Random Thoughts
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • Conducive to making ideal moral judgments, there is conceptual clarity, rationality, impartiality, coolness, and reference to a valid moral principle.
  • This narrative must be placed within a historic, political and cultural context to re-frame the relationship between the state and the citizen, and will require the development of robust and impartial rule of law backed by independent judiciaries. Ziad J. Asali, M.D.: Arabs Deserve a Party of the Citizen
  • Now, journalists, of course, are supposed to be impartial recorders and reporters of fact.
  • Civil servants serve elected government ministers and must be politically impartial What jobs are on offer? Times, Sunday Times
  • Baker added that Mr. Broder's great strength was the impartiality in his writing - not a splitting of the difference on people and issues, but instead a judiciousness in his analysis of individuals and institutions. David Broder, 81, dies; set 'gold standard' for political journalism
  • Also: "The aspiration to impartiality is just that — it's an aspiration because it denies the fact that we are by our experiences making different choices than others. Sotomayor speech at center of court nomination
  • He is said to have riled them by making negative comments about players - when they thought he should remain impartial as a host. The Sun
  • He showed tactful impartiality.
  • BBC must become more impartial" is the headline on its own take (HERE) on its deep-rooted culture of leftist-liberal bias, implying that it is already impartial and merely needs to adjust a little to become even more so. Archive 2007-06-17
  • The report found, among other defects, that the Iraqi High Tribunal was undermined from the outset by Iraqi government actions that threatened the independence and perceived impartiality of the court. Iraq
  • Instead of acting impartially, these governors have been acting in most partisan manner, virtually watching the interests of the sangh parivar.
  • This can give rise to substantial queries over the independence and impartiality of the judiciary.
  • His views on private prisons may not have sat comfortably with the Executive but it would be very sad if they were not reappointing him because they feared his impartiality.
  • This contrasts with the common image of scientists being objective and impartial analysts who allow the empirical facts to speak for themselves.
  • I think it is dishonest to advertise their service as impartial.
  • It may well be doubted, on an impartial view, if the mutilation of the country's industrial system by such measures of isolation does not after all rather weaken the nation even for warlike ends; but then, the discretionary authorities in the dynastic States are always, and it may be presumed necessarily, hampered with obsolete theories handed down from that cameralistic age, when the little princes of the Fatherland were making dynastic history. An Inquiry Into The Nature Of Peace And The Terms Of Its Perpetuation
  • The rules provide a framework for public competition; ensuring commercial leasing is a fair, open, impartial and transparent process.
  • Therefore, we need constantly perfect the public servant merit system and improve the checking method, so as that we can choose and employ the talents fairly, impartially and objectively.
  • Can one hold such strong views and yet remain impartial and objective?
  • But like many who have tried to examine this body of evidence impartially, I remain sceptical, and in virtually all cases it is never really clear that dogs can be excluded outright. The Cupar roe deer carcass
  • That said, we're quite peachy with the notion that curtailing one's self-interest in the name of impartiality is a virtue. Outer Alliance Pride Day
  • Before the referendum he ignored impartiality to spread gloom about Brexit. Times, Sunday Times
  • The moon cools your emotions so you can give a relative or close friend the impartial advice that really helps. The Sun
  • It was a glorious morning, the impartial sun shining over everything with a kind of benison.
  • If Guthrie wishes to be seen as having left the world of hemline journalism behind him, now is his heaven-made chance to demonstrate a headmasterly fairness and impartiality - one that is quite clearly beyond Marr and the boys.
  • Only Shakspeare was endowed with that healthy equilibrium of nature whose point of rest was midway between the imagination and the understanding, -- that perfectly unruffled brain which reflected all objects with almost inhuman impartiality, -- that outlook whose range was ecliptical, dominating all zones of human thought and action, -- that power of verisimilar conception which could take away _Richard III_ from The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 08, June 1858
  • It is useful, then, to draw a distinction between two sorts of impartialist moral theory. Impartiality
  • Since Mill's utilitarian is liberal, Mill has little patience for views, which he considers caricatures, in which utilitarianism doesn't care about distribution -- Mill reiterates, over and over, the importance of what he calls impartiality, and one soon realizes that this is in fact a principle governing distribution of benefits, one that he thinks is built into the principle of utility itself. Siris
  • Writing about a case in which someone in a lifeboat must choose between saving a stranger and saving his or her spouse, Williams argued that an impartialist morality that would demand that the agent consider whether giving preference to the spouse is permissible gives that agent “one thought too many” (Williams 1981, 18). Moral Reasoning
  • The reasons for introducing these measures remain valid and the parking restrictions are now being enforced by the city council on an impartial basis.
  • The advantage is that he will be able to take a more distant and dispassionate view of things and will be seen to be impartial.
  • But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere.
  • In the internet, a good algorithm of rate allocating must impartially reflect the utility of users.
  • They have both played for Newcastle and I support the team, so being impartial was always going to be a challenge.
  • Manning said the clerks of the T & T Parliament had been known to perform their duties with a high level of impartiality, and were outstanding in the region for this.
  • But can your critic remain impartial while commenting on a member of the Sun team? The Sun
  • Impartialist theories which allow for some first-order partiality, but which nevertheless insist that all such behavior be justified in second-order impartialist terms, might be referred to as fundamentally impartialist moral theories. Impartiality
  • Legally, an executor is a fiduciary, who is expected to act prudently and be impartial. New Heirs Face Confusing Tax Choice
  • the impartial eye of a scientist
  • I would need to be convinced that the centre would provide impartial advice.
  • Anyone who thinks the Beeb is impartial and is not controlled by Government should wake up and smell the coffee! Catflap to US TV networks
  • From my impartial position, I understand why Christians are offended by Dawkins, but I don't see anything he does as impinging academic freedom or being uncivil. Bradley Monton's Paper criticizing Dover Decision
  • The career diplomat, elected on a rota basis, promised she would be impartial.
  • Before the referendum he ignored impartiality to spread gloom about Brexit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since children start off focused on their own gratifications, getting them to internalise a kind of impartiality that constantly requires them to make large sacrifices for the sake of others would have extremely high costs.
  • It would deny a speedy and public trial before an independent and impartial tribunal. Times, Sunday Times
  • Only by researching stocks thoroughly or by taking skilled impartial advice can a client ensure against being misled.
  • Despite his claims to impartiality, the colonel indulged Captain Charles Lewis, brother of Andrew Lewis, who had helped get him his colonelcy. George Washington’s First War
  • Moreover, she has to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • Drawing on the organisation's wide range of membrane technology expertise, it offers impartial advice on improving process efficiency.
  • Being impartial in judgement is a very important principle. Sound Politics: It's in the P-I
  • But it was equally obvious, to the impartial eye at the lens, that there was nothing else to do.
  • His father was an upright man, and dealt equal justice among his children, whom he 'lathered' daily with the strictest impartiality. The Bushman — Life in a New Country
  • The difficulty is that first of all you never buy a mouthpiece, otherwise the judges couldn't do what they do impartially.
  • There were threats of annexation from the United States of all or part of the Territory and it was deemed necessary to establish the rule of impartial law in order to prevent lawlessness. Policing in Today's 'Sophisticated' Society
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • Twelve freeholders were chosen, who, having sworn, together with the hundreder, or presiding magistrate of that division, to administer impartial justice, [**] proceeded to the examination of that cause which was submitted to their jurisdiction. The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part A. From the Britons of Early Times to King John
  • Scarce any nation has dealt equally and impartially with every sort of industry.
  • They brought it before the bailliage of the Temple; but the Sieur Lebrun had some misgivings as to the impartiality of the court, and he carried it before the judges at the Châtelet. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 57, No. 357, June, 1845
  • The circumstantially imposed corrections refer to the discursive move toward offering impartial, even detached, moral judgment.
  • While it is quite possible that the Secured Creditors did in fact receive what they might have received in a liquidation, that conclusion is to a large extent pure speculation — valuation in bankruptcy is always a matter of some guesswork, but in most cases the parties fighting over valuation get the opportunity to muster evidence and present their cases to an impartial decisionmaker in the adversarial setting. The Volokh Conspiracy » Assessing the Chrysler Bankruptcy
  • Whether this extreme position really is required, either by moral impartiality or by the demand that we treat people as equals, is a matter of great dispute, not only between partialists and impartialists but within the impartialist camp itself. Impartiality
  • They say the service is impartial and free, and they will send a courier around with some forms to sign. Times, Sunday Times
  • Article 4 The forward transactions shall comply with the principle of openness, impartiality and fairness.
  • The tremendous moral power of this solitary work lies in the fact that it is a series of terrific and fascinating tableaux, embodying the idea of inflexible poetic justice impartially administered upon king and varlet, pope and beggar, oppressor and victim, projected amidst the unalterable necessities of eternity, and moving athwart the lurid abyss and the azure cope with an intense distinctness that sears the gazer's eyeballs. The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • Complete impartiality and neutrality are the necessary conditions for winning the trust of the conflicting sides.
  • Mrs. Bolton's account of the transaction was not, it may be imagined, entirely an impartial narrative.
  • It would deny a speedy and public trial before an independent and impartial tribunal. Times, Sunday Times
  • In consequence, the judge is able to act, and to be seen to act, as an impartial and independent adjudicator.
  • Because as Debby brings up, the grandparent is not impartial. Teens & Nursing Homes
  • That's probably why others come to you for advice or for an impartial opinion on something. The Sun
  • Rather, the deontologist will claim, it reflects the fact that it is morally legitimate (perhaps, again, because justifiable in second-order impartialist terms) for an agent to regard her own goals and interests as especially important to her. Impartiality
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • Consequently, those laws tend to dictate impartial treatment and equal service to all members of the targeted group.
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • The BBC must ensure that due impartiality is preserved in its news programmes.
  • Such fairness demands a fair judicial process administered by an impartial judiciary.
  • The indeterminacy of the relations between commonsense impartiality and other ethical considerations means that commonsense impartiality resists the kind of systematisation that moral theory demands. Bernard Williams
  • The truth is that aircraft accident investigation should be carried out in a completely impartial and objective manner.
  • A trial must be fair and impartial.
  • Those decisions have been made not to serve the interests of any one litigant, but always to serve the larger interest of impartial justice. Wonk Room » Sotomayor Hearing Live-Blog, Day 1
  • He tries hard to stress his impartiality and that by expressing his opinions as a journalist he is only doing his job.
  • Otherwise, judicatory impartiality and efficiency can not be ensured.
  • Careers officers offer impartial advice to all pupils.
  • What marks it out from all other broadcasting organisations is that people trust implicitly that its journalism is impartial, authoritative and true.
  • The only way an investor can be sure he or she is getting impartial advice is by paying by fee. Times, Sunday Times
  • This means that the monarchy is apolitical and impartial.
  • We should make objective and impartial assessment of the hard realities of life.
  • In fact, as we are nearing the 5 anniversary of the April 2002 events, there is still NO ONE duly inculpated AND completely judged for any of the murders that happened that day, and we are still waiting for an impartial "truth commission" to works its wonders, something that after 5 years would be a real miracle. There is an official fascist line in Venezuela, from the government
  • Drawing on the organisation's wide range of membrane technology expertise, it offers impartial advice on improving process efficiency.
  • But I do conceive of a new game in the meantime, as I watch the impartial observers who survey us nonstop for our own safety.
  • The fact remains that there are many types of partialist theories, and many types of impartialist ones, and that continuing to speak of the Impartiality
  • Drawing on the organisation's wide range of membrane technology expertise, it offers impartial advice on improving process efficiency.
  • Of course, over time ministers sometimes promoted officers whom they found sympathetic to the cause, but in general the service was respected as the giver of fearless and impartial advice.
  • They say the service is impartial and free, and they will send a courier around with some forms to sign. Times, Sunday Times
  • There will probably be a spin-off for the Tories in all this: watch the BBC galloping to the centre as the election draws near and carefully (and probably ostentatiously as it no longer does ‘subtle’ very much) making sure that an veneer of impartiality is smeared over the whole which will last until about five minutes after the Tories win. Archive 2008-03-30
  • Banishing theology as insignificant and unimportant is no longer a legitimate option in the current post-modern age, when all voices demand an equal if not impartial hearing. Answering Questions about ID
  • Impartiality is a concept which has been used to convey many things.
  • No one will take seriously a body that is not seen to be independent and impartial.
  • Free evaluation non - prosecution embodies the values of impartiality, efficiency and order.
  • Impartiality and objectivity are hard to prove in such circumstances.
  • The impartial balance means the Crittenden Compromise, whose impartiality the North fails to see in any other light than a fond leaning to the South, giving it all territory South of a certain latitude, a _latitude_ that never was intended by the Constitution. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • Yet as a progressive, I believe that Lantos is betraying his own ideals by promoting an entirely one-sided view of the so-called “reunification of Jerusalem” which, in actuality, was merely its redivision, and is more so doing Israel little service by failing to act as an impartial broker, as is a necessary precondition to negotiating “a peaceful, two-state solution to end the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians.” With all due respect, Mr. Lantos, you’re wrong about Jerusalem | Jewschool
  • She maintains a consistent impartiality as she analyzes the bizarre system of punishment.
  • That family connection calls into question her ability to be impartial. The Sun
  • Government regulations require councils to remain strictly impartial once an election is called, commonly called the "purdah" period.
  • This placement reflects the impartiality of the jurors who must decide guilt or innocence.
  • The underpinning of all good journalism is a devotion to objectivity and impartiality.
  • The Gov, which should be impartial, is picking sides. Wonk Room » Fox Attacked Auto Bailout Because It Helped Unions, Now Attacks Auto Bankruptcy Because It…Helps Unions?
  • A basic predicate of jury service is the juror's ability to render a fair and impartial verdict.
  • They say the service is impartial and free, and they will send a courier around with some forms to sign. Times, Sunday Times
  • That's probably why others come to you for advice or for an impartial opinion on something. The Sun
  • He was not an impartial, objective reteller of events. Denver Post: News: Breaking: Local
  • Whether or not Mr. Levant may possess by ideology or by virtue of his religious or ethnic lineage, a certain bias which would present a kind of imbalance in impartial argument, it cannot be said that Mr. Levant did not possess the freedom of expression to publish the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and the undue expenses he incurred from that earlier inquisition is the real crime. 2008 June 10 « Unambiguously Ambidextrous
  • But the judge maintained that the jurors 'ability to impartially decide an "inarguably" high-profile case could be impaired by unsolicited interruptions. Blagojevich Trial: Jury To Begin Deliberations
  • Employers must consider all candidates impartially and without bias.
  • Nevertheless, morality is intelligible only as a social discipline based on general rules impartially applied.
  • It was expected that the task of governing the state would bring impartiality and moderation in their conduct.
  • While it's an odd sight, a federal judge dabbling in politics to excise politics from the judicial sphere, there is a serious question here: When may a judge, sworn to "faithfully and impartially" apply law, politick to change it? Sandra Day O'Connor v. the People
  • Impartial psychological analysis discloses in neuropaths disturbances and traumatic memories.
  • The chiefs of the district, Bráhmans and others, had already met in the choultry; and no other cause being brought forward, they proceeded immediately to that of the four Bráhmans, who advanced into the middle of the court, and stated that a sharp contest having arisen among them, they were come to have it decided with fairness and impartiality. The Book of Noodles Stories of Simpletons; or, Fools and Their Follies
  • Moreover, she has to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • This Prince was an impartial chief magistrate; he prided himself upon his "invariable" principles of justice, and he allowed nothing to influence his decisions. Vivian Grey
  • Everywhere, the ‘authoritative’ spew forth: talking heads, hired to impart wisdom, partial often in impartial guise, complicit in the consumer con-game we call society, where the mediocre is hailed as great! 2009 February 14 | NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS
  • No credible person could dispute that having impartial judges is a compelling state interest.
  • While I understand that to effectively enforce the law a degree of impartiality is required it is a fact that some normal people will react to scum and then will tell the police exactly what happened and get locked up. The Single Measure Of Public Confidence « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • They want to be able to say that they did not commandeer us, but they know that they can trust us not to be really impartial.
  • In consequence, Secretaries of State tended to look elsewhere within the Ministry and elsewhere for impartial advice.
  • It will provide free and impartial advice and guidance on how to take a complaint forward. Times, Sunday Times
  • This convinced D' Ewes that ‘all impartiall judgements [had] just ground to conclude it to be the finger of God himselfe, in punishing the mercilesse murthers of his dear Saints.’
  • Get free and impartial expert advice to find the best deal for you. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the world economic forum at Davos last year he noted that the most successful economies are underpinned by fair elections and impartial justice. Times, Sunday Times
  • He insists impartiality is improving, claiming regular invitations to Coalition leaders prove his point. The Sun
  • Sheriffs and justices of the peace retained by a lord would not be impartial: juries could be packed or intimidated.
  • At the world economic forum at Davos last year he noted that the most successful economies are underpinned by fair elections and impartial justice. Times, Sunday Times
  • The second great purpose of the monarchy is to be available as an impartial umpire above party when the nation is split by a constitutional crisis.
  • Get free and impartial expert advice to find the best deal for you. Times, Sunday Times
  • In fact, impartiality is far less important in analysing data than parsimony and rigorous self discipline.
  • The European Convention on Human Rights demands a fair trial before an independent and impartial tribunal.
  • It is not surprising that the decision was not as dispassionate and impartial as we might feel after 60 years.
  • Illusions and allusions to concepts of truth and impartiality, far from indivisible concepts, have always figured prominently in British political propaganda.
  • Waiving humanity, national honor, the claims of gratitude, the precious satisfaction arising from deeds of charity and justice to the weak and defenceless, -- the appeal for impartial suffrage addresses itself with great pertinency to the darkest, coldest, and flintiest side of the human heart, and would wring righteousness from the unfeeling calculations of human selfishness. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue
  • The council called for an immediate cessation of this divisive public discourse and also called for firm and impartial application of the law of the land against those who continue to endanger public peace and amity by such discourse.
  • An adjudicator must be, and must be seen to be, disinterested, unbiased and impartial.
  • Readers respect us for our impartiality and balance, but does that mean we should never carry more strident views?
  • The guardian thinks she's supposed to be cool and calm, indifferent and impartial, a door to keep out errant knights and travellers, but she's still steamed about being stuck down here.
  • The appearance of impartiality must be maintained in all investigative forums.
  • I hope we can look forward to some real insights into not just the difficulties of life in Rwanda, but the root causes underlying those difficulties - the structural issues, such as good governance, corruption, freedom of the press, property-rights, impartial law & order, attitudes to democracy is it tribal or is it political, and is there widespread acknowledgment that unrigged elections are more important than your team winning? Preparing for Rwanda
  • In consequence, Secretaries of State tended to look elsewhere within the Ministry and elsewhere for impartial advice.
  • And as wisdom will evidence itself in meekness, so meekness will be a great friend to wisdom; for nothing hinders the regular apprehension, the solid judgment, and impartiality of thought, necessary to our acting wisely, so much as passion. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • open-minded impartiality
  • Boutros-Ghali's 1995 Supplement to an Agenda for Peace reasserts the crucial importance of consent, impartiality, and non-use of force to operational success.
  • Panic, incompetence, in-fighting and back-stabbing were all documented by the impartial hand of the civil service.
  • For the BBC to call itself impartial is a sick joke, their political bias is clear and obvious and I am sure that I (and others) could list their built-in prejudices with ease. Are the BBC going easy on Labour
  • It was expected to lead to the appointment of an impartial body to determine responsibility for the conflict.
  • Otherwise, judicatory impartiality and efficiency can not be ensured.
  • Keep the virtues - mistrusting government, exploding myths, analyzing media - but apply them impartially.
  • With free impartial advice readily available, beginning the process of saving becomes much easier. Times, Sunday Times
  • A trial must be fair and impartial.
  • I undertake to exercise the functions and powers of the office in a fair and an impartial way.
  • Although many people continue to speak of a ˜partialist vs. impartialist debate,™ it should by now be clear that neither Impartiality
  • The independence and impartiality of the tribunal judges hearing the appeals was not doubted. Times, Sunday Times
  • The BBC must ensure that due impartiality is preserved in its news programmes.
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • We had been able to impress the governments abroad with the value of an impartial and unpurchasable news service, as opposed to the venal type of journalism, which was too common on the European continent. Defenders of Democracy; contributions from representative men and women of letters and other arts from our allies and our own country, edited by the Gift book committee of the Militia of Mercy
  • The state, on its part, has been impartial in its abdication of responsibility with regard to women of all communities.
  • She knows better finally than the adults around her - significantly those who would condescend to her - the authentic ground of human respect and impartial justice.
  • The administration of public justice by the magistrate is an ordinance of God; in it the scales are held, and ought to be held by a steady and impartial hand; and we ought to submit to it, for the Lord's sake, and to see his authority in that of the magistrate, Rom. xiii. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)

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