[
US
/əˈnɪntɹəstɪŋ/
]
[ UK /ʌnˈɪntəɹəstɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ʌnˈɪntəɹəstɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
characteristic or suggestive of an institution especially in being uniform or dull or unimaginative
institutional food -
arousing no interest or attention or curiosity or excitement
a very uninteresting account of her trip
How To Use uninteresting In A Sentence
- Dallas auditionee Kimberly Carver there, after Simon called her uninteresting and "jazz TV" - and guest judge Neil Patrick ... WN.com - Articles related to Black stars don’t mean Hollywood is color-blind
- Two words that describe the pace and plot of this film are plodding and uninteresting.
- I don't myself find these questions entirely uninteresting, but are they really the preeminently "serious" kinds of questions a writer of fiction can pursue? Saying Something
- He talks uninterestingly in boring cliches.
- The researcher tried to dress up the uninteresting data
- What we cannot rely on any more is solidly predictable attendance at uninteresting concerts.
- As long as these firms consisted of small, family-owned, patriarchally run units, and the price competition was fierce, their activities remained relatively uninteresting. The Prize in Economics 1978 - Presentation Speech
- Your only options seem uninteresting, if not plain dull. Times, Sunday Times
- Not at all uninteresting but somewhat unsurprising and of minimal artistic value. Times, Sunday Times
- While I think his ethical position is, if uninteresting, unexceptionable enough, his refusal to confront the political connection Foucault makes except with such bland dismissiveness is insufficient precisely because uninteresting. Notes on 'Foucault and the Hedgerow History of Sexuality'