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is indifferently
adverb
In an indifferent manner.
Exact(3)
In English the book is indifferently written and oddly unbalanced.
Your opponent is far away, or, if near, is indifferently hostile.
Its harbor is impossibly quaint and its views breathtakingly beautiful; its center is indifferently maintained and virtually paralyzed by traffic at 8 o'clock every morning, when the workday begins.
Similar(53)
The box scores of the black-college games were indifferently assembled and riddled with errors.
The back room at Reuben's was indifferently decorated and shopworn; Maui Tacos' basement has been refinished in distressed wood and corrugated metal to suggest a beach shack.
From the way her longing, loving gaze trails after the world that's indifferently passing her by, it appears that she would be more content passing out daisies.
The opera was indifferently received by the court but quickly won over the Prague audiences and went on to become one of Mozart's most admired works over the ensuing decades.
It has yielded something else: an enormous capital investment in properties that some purchasers say were indifferently managed, if not downright neglected, in the later years of stewardship by Mr. Helmsley and his colleagues Irving Schneider and Alvin Schwartz.
Even their pain was indifferently dealt with, in case they were turned into opiate addicts in their final days.Related items Ethics and politics: Whose life is it, anyway?Oct 30th 2003 The right to die: But who says?Oct 16th 2003 Euthanasia: Last rightsNov 15th 2001 On death and dying: The final hurryMar 20th 1997Dr Kübler-Ross set out to change this.
Three-dimensional sculpture and easel painting, so central to Western aesthetics, played little role in Islamic art before modern times, while media highly regarded by traditional Islamic cultures, like ceramics, textiles and -- above all -- calligraphy, are indifferently valued in the West.
Heidegger's celebrated notion of Dasein (existence, but - literally - "being here") was a revolt against the "analytical" traditions of the late 19th century and the thought that the truths described by philosophy were indifferently available to all people, whether "here" (that is, part of this culture) or not.
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