unperceptive

ADJECTIVE
  1. lacking perception
    as unperceptive as a boulder
  2. lacking sensitivity, taste, or judgment
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How To Use unperceptive In A Sentence

  • Her pedestrian, low-brow, unperceptive prose has struck a chord with the so-bad-it's-good brigade.
  • In the last pages of the book, his literary executor, commenting on the journal that has been the vehicle for the narrative, reviews events from the perspective of an unperceptive dryasdust and fashions a rational explanation of the less believable aspects of the tale. Stromata Blog:
  • The reviews of the older, Establishment critics were largely unperceptive, but the younger audiences and younger critics loved her.
  • Their diaries are dull, unperceptive and self-exculpatory. Times, Sunday Times
  • The film gently satirises the Establishment, in the shape of Holland's unperceptive employers at the Bank, the media, and the police.
  • It is unperceptive of you to dismiss the Surgeon General's comments about Descartes.
  • Socially she could be bossy and unperceptive, but also extremely hospitable and generous in relation to friends and family.
  • Some people are just so unperceptive or just uninterested in their surroundings, I'm not even sure if she realised that other people were on the train with her.
  • In Raviv's telling, Perelman is a remarkably unperceptive man who never understood exactly what he was buying or what to do with it.
  • as unperceptive as a boulder
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