unimpressed

[ US /ˌənɪmˈpɹɛst/ ]
[ UK /ˌʌnɪmpɹˈɛst/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not moved to serious regard
    trying to appear unimpressed
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How To Use unimpressed In A Sentence

  • They found him out back, banging on a butter churn, watched by unimpressed cows.
  • Voters would be deeply unimpressed by leadership turmoil during an economic crisis. Times, Sunday Times
  • Writing on Alibayli’s Blog, even some of the dispossessed remain unimpressed by the campaign of street protests. Global Voices in English » Georgia: Opposition protests on hold, new concerns emerge
  • Of course, as he tells his story, what emerges is his fundamental decency, and Old Nick remains unimpressed.
  • Petrarch is notoriously cool towards Dante and is often characterized as unimpressed with Dante’s so-called ‘humanist’ credentials. Simon A. Gilson, Dante and Renaissance Florence (CUP, 2005)
  • But when you show your medals to an elemental, force of nature, the elemental force of nature tends to be unimpressed. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was once regarded with suspicion by employers, who were unimpressed by the notion of students lazing around for months.
  • She is distinctly unimpressed - and quite rightly so. The Sun
  • If he seems unimpressed by modern Hollywood he's trying not to admit it. Times, Sunday Times
  • When they awoke their stinking hangovers were not helped by being hauled up in front of a distinctly unimpressed female judge.
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