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[ US /ənˈfiɫɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ʌnfˈiːlɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. devoid of feeling for others
    an unfeeling wretch
  2. devoid of feeling or sensation
    unfeeling trees

How To Use unfeeling In A Sentence

  • Worn over her unfeeling body, the suit gave the thirty-something Casey the strength of twenty men, and made her almost impervious to harm as well as giving her certain enhanced sensory abilities.
  • What argufies so many words?" said the unfeeling Captain; "it is but a slit of the ear; it only looks as if you had been in the pillory. Evelina: or, The History of a Young Lady's Entrance Into the World
  • What argufies so many words?" said the unfeeling Captain; "it is but Evelina, Or, the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World
  • `You're here to raise money, not whoopee ," was Sarah's unfeeling retort. THE RECYCLED CITIZEN
  • I still felt numb and unfeeling, as if nothing that was happening was real.
  • She has been exposed as an amoral, unfeeling, self-serving, despicably conscience-less human being.
  • He said all this politely, but there was something unfeeling and mocking in his tone.
  • The characters could easily remain unfeeling mouthpieces spouting ideological positions, but Dobbin brings out the humanity of each one, making all of them in some way sympathetic.
  • Accident, by throwing into my hands this last letter to the uncle whose goodness you have most unwarrantably and unfeelingly abused, has given birth to an investigation, by which I have arrived at the discovery of the long course of rapacity by which you have pillaged from the same source. Camilla: or, A Picture of Youth
  • And, in the face of such unfeeling, unthinking idiocy, how can old Britons remain hopeful?
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