Sentence examples for dispassionate for from inspiring English sources

"dispassionate for" can be a grammatically correct and usable combination in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone who is impartial and objective in their reasoning or decision-making. Example: The judge was known for being dispassionate for both sides in the courtroom, always carefully considering the evidence before making a ruling.

Exact(4)

Let's be dispassionate for a minute: do the lessons of recent history indicate we actually make these things better?

"I can't be dispassionate for obvious reasons, I've got to subjective as my people worked on it [the launch]," Sorrell said.

While the musical style that resulted was too dispassionate for some critics' taste, others praised Mr. Starker's faultless technique; purity of tone; clean, polished phrasing; and acute concern with the composer's intent.

Opening track "Do the Joy" (available as a free download at www.aircheology.com) sounds like the story of the proliferation of life on Earth told in a dispassionate "for mash, get Smash" robo-voice, but it's so mangled that it might be about something else entirely.

Similar(52)

This speech, larded with sentiment but also strangely dispassionate -- "For 66 years I have lived and not yet been granted the happiness of being called Father, and now the authorities demand of me that I sacrifice all my children" -- gives a keyhole glimpse into the complex man, squeaky of voice and heavy of build, whose shadow lies over the 650-odd pages that follow.

Can hearing parents really make a dispassionate decision for a toddler about a cochlear implant?

Conspiracy theorists are not typically driven by a dispassionate search for truth.

This theme -- of civilized men doing dispassionate analysis for a rather less civilized leadership -- runs strong.

From the beginning of their alliance in 2008, Biden felt passionately that he needed to interpret the dispassionate Obama for regular folk.

From there he pivoted to recent history, making a seemingly dispassionate case for why no President, even Clinton himself, could ever have repaired in four years all the damage Obama found when he arrived in the White House in 2009.

Private industry uses a formula called a cost-benefit ratio -- a dispassionate regard for profit over lives -- that government cannot afford nor consider.

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