Disinterested means holding no particular personal interest, other than the primary one.
eg: "Being disinterested, the judge could make a fair judgement."
In this case, it means that the judge is not biased either because he does not personally know the people being judged, or because he is not bribed.
eg: "This interviewer is disinterested."
Similarly, if while recruiting people, an interviewer has already decided on someone, possibly through personal relations, but is still taking interviews, he will NOT be disinterested, since he is interested in someone other than who he is interviewing. This would also apply to people who recruit to gain some personal favours, sexual or otherwise. But if when taking views, he views each interviewee as a potential candidate, merely on the basis of his/her qualifications, then the interviewer could be said to be disinterested.
*Not to be confused with uninterested, which means the person is not interested, or not inspired to do something.
Disinterested and uninterested are different.
To a disinterested observer, both sides seemed unreasonable in their demands. It was difficult to find a disinterested voter as the fiercely-contested election drew nearer.
The Boy Was Disinterested In What The Teacher Said .
Example sentence - The children had no fear of being reprimanded because their parents were disinterested in their behavior.
To be dispassionate is to not be influenced by emotions. An example sentence is: Sometimes it helps, in certain situations, to be dispassionate.
Example sentences for disinterested: I wanted to plan a surprise party for Mom's birthday, but my siblings seemed disinterested. As a child, she was completely disinterested in dolls and preferred to play with Tonka trucks. Since buying that video game, he has been disinterested in all other activities.
Judges should be disinterested, unbiased, as a case's verdict must be produced on evidence, not one's inner feelings.
either could be correct. disinterested is unaffected by self-interest uninterested is not having or showing interest most likely it's the latter, but not knowing the sentence, or what it pretains to....
Yes, "dis-" and "-interested" are morphemes in the word "disinterested." The prefix "dis-" indicates negation or reversal, while the root word "interested" conveys a sense of concern or attention.
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.