How To Use Unprejudiced In A Sentence

  • Generally, they can be counted upon to demonstrate a fair and unprejudiced judgement that attempts to temper personal bias through recognition of wider social implications.
  • Listen to Ullmann speak, or read her bestsellers Changing and Choices and you will be surprised by her diarist's style - direct, unprejudiced, frank and personal.
  • She saw what they saw, encouraged the expression of their ideas and spontaneously offered them unprejudiced consideration.
  • an unprejudiced appraisal of the pros and cons
  • The worst of it is that such a compilation brings a man money, because there are always plenty of people who like to dabble in mud; and a ghoul is the most impervious of beings, probably because a ghoul of this species regards himself merely as an unprejudiced seeker after truth, and claims to be what he would call a realist. The Silent Isle
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  • But yet hear me, � hear with patience; �hear me with that unprejudiced reason which is as much your distinction as your beauty or your virtue. Isabella. A Novel
  • Most of us recognize and value the efforts of the very early feminists - the vote (way back), equal pay for equal jobs, fair and unprejudiced admission to colleges.
  • Impartiality also requires an open, unprejudiced mind.
  • As to the Translation it self, as I hope none but envious Criticks will be offended thereat, so I shall endeavour, though briefly, yet fully, to satisfie every impartial and unprejudiced Reader, both as to the Circumstance, and principal Reason inducing me hereunto, which is as follows. The Principles of the Most Ancient and Modern Philosophy
  • Until then I can't believe that very many unprejudiced readers will believe that all of the fruits of the CEAA are fit only for the cider-press. Fruits of the MLA
  • In both stories the narrator must learn to act in an independent, self-motivated, unprejudiced, and inner-directed way.
  • At last she found one: in the eyes of even unprejudiced observers, it must appear to excel all other schools -- _because of its Girl Scout troop_! The Girl Scouts' Good Turn
  • `There must be a few honest and unprejudiced lawyers around. MURKY SHALLOWS
  • That the conduct of the Moscow Trials was such as to convince any unprejudiced person that no attempt was made to ascertain the truth.
  • Even to the unprejudiced eye, the ‘Mysore Generation’ seems to be as variously gifted as the ‘Bloomsbury Group’ - and yet there is a whole shelf of books on the latter, not one on the former.
  • Why is it ok for CNN to be completely biased towards Americans and BBC to be biased towards the British but Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya have to objective and unprejudiced and, preferably, pander to American public opinion?
  • Asylum is a hot political issue, which divides public opinion: many of the cases themselves are emotionally moving, and it is Carole's job to maintain a clear and unprejudiced mind to adjudicate fairly.
  • But if religion is not consciously vital to the Filipinos, as they themselves would conceive and act on it (and I make the assertion in the assumption that the reader understands as I do by _consciously vital_ that for which the individual or the race is willing to die singly or collectively), the unprejudiced observer must admit that it is vital to their ultimate evolution, vital in just the sense that any function is vital to one who is in need of it. A Woman's Impression of the Philippines
  • As the unprejudiced reader sees [Dr Gummere proceeds] this clear and admirable account confirms the doctrine of early days revived with fresh ethnological evidence in the writings of Dr Brown and of Adam Smith, that dance, poetry and song were once a single and inseparable function, and is in itself fatal to the idea of rhythmic prose, of solitary recitation, as foundations of poetry…. IV. Children’s Reading (II)
  • ‘Bliss is one of the few places where teenagers can get support and clear, unprejudiced information that can help them weave their way through the maze of adolescence,’ she says.
  • If any thing has fallen under your observation, either on the one side or the other, I intreat you to lay it totally aside; to come to the consideration of this subject with cool, dispassionate, unprejudiced, unprepossessed minds, to attend to the evidence that will be laid before you, and to that evidence alone -- by that evidence let the Defendants stand or fall. The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane, commonly called Lord Cochrane, the Hon. Andrew Cochrane Johnstone, Richard Gathorne Butt, Ralph Sandom, Alexander M'Rae, John Peter Holloway, and Henry Lyte for A Conspiracy In the Court of
  • Only in this way can the unprejudiced and unbiased position of the Times be understood.
  • While the subject matter may be terminally uneasy viewing for many, the unprejudiced should award accolades to a surrealistic tale of brotherly love and dealing with one's lot.
  • He was really ‘above it all’ you might say, with a very disinterested, unprejudiced mind.
  • And as I took courage, I made friends among the women students, finding many of them unprejudiced and companionable. THE BIRTHDAY OF THE WORLD
  • And who is smart enough, fair enough, or unprejudiced enough to make that kind of judgment?
  • The picture by Picasso could have been admired by an unprejudiced critic a thousand years ago, and will be a thousand years hence.
  • Otherwise, the sketch is exactly accurate, and is here presented as the unprejudiced description and estimate of a foreign gentleman, who had no inducement, such as might be attributed to a Southern writer, to overcolor his portrait. A Life of Gen Robert E Lee
  • Yet an unprejudiced reader would naturally suppose, that Procopius means to describe a tribe of Germans in the alliance of Rome; and not a confederacy of Gallic cities, which had revolted from the empire. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • From the tireless Anne Bayefsky comes another jaw-dropping illustration of the UN's balanced, sane and unprejudiced attitude towards the Jews.
  • There was nothing in them to justify unbelief to a mind unprejudiced, undistempered, calm. Modern Skepticism: A Journey Through the Land of Doubt and Back Again A Life Story
  • In both stories the narrator must learn to act in an independent, self-motivated, unprejudiced, and inner-directed way.
  • As his brilliant biographies demonstrate, he had extraordinary insight and a naturally unprejudiced mind.
  • I'm going to have to go back in there and speak with her as though I were an unprejudiced bystander.
  • He or she could be a decent, reserved, open-minded, unprejudiced, intelligent conservative such as Judge Michael McConnell.

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