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impersonal

[ UK /ɪmpˈɜːsənə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˌɪmˈpɝsənəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having no personal preference
    a neutral observer
    impersonal criticism
  2. not relating to or responsive to individual persons
    an impersonal corporation
    an impersonal remark

How To Use impersonal In A Sentence

  • A vast, impersonal, abstract pattern stands be-hind this legend.
  • Yet while pilotless drones are dehumanised and impersonalised, mobile phone ring tones and screensavers are instances of the humanity and personality of the people behind technology.
  • The criticism of our time ... is indissociable from an investigation and experience of its transcendental field (s), of the (impersonal) tendencies and haecceities which traverse it, as well as the potentialities, utopian ones perhaps, with which our present can be composed. The Skeptic's Field Guide
  • It sounds more impersonal, but looks at the bigger picture in the decision-making process.
  • Some astrologers claim that scientific research is impersonal or unspiritual or insensitive to deeper truths.
  • However, it is an impersonal god, without name, without history, immanent in the world, diffused within an innumerable plurality of things…
  • Suddenly the room felt like a hospital room again, cold, silent and impersonal.
  • In both cases large, impersonal, bureaucratic structures proved incapable of responding to the needs of a more diverse population and their non-material aspirations.
  • The last time we see him, he has turned his back on his remaining parent and is walking away by himself, a small, agonized figure dwarfed by the huge, impersonal lobby of the school.
  • The rest of the room was neat and impersonal.
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