The class was uninterested in the history lesson until the teacher began to act out the scenes.
She seemed uninterested in the topic of conversation and kept glancing at her phone.
Disinterested and uninterested are different.
She seemed uninterested in the topic of conversation and quickly changed the subject.
i am using the word indifference in a sentence. ^^ there you go this isn't a sentence. for ex: the girl is indifference in her sex
The suffix for "uninterested" is "-ed."
Uninterested in politics, Bruno was apathetic about whether he lived under a capitalist or communist regime.
No, the word uninterested is an adjective, a word to describe a noun as lacking interest.The noun form for the adjective uninterested is uninterestedness.
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....
The prefix for the word "uninterested" is "un-".
The homophone pair you are referring to is "board" (a piece of wood) and "bored" (uninterested).
As yet another person used nonplussed to describe an uninterested reaction, I furrowed my brow and appeared nonplussed as to how the meaning of this word had changed.
Yes