What Is a Word for Not Caring

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indifferent

[ in-dif-er-uhnt, -dif-ruhnt ]

/ ɪnˈdɪf ər ənt, -ˈdɪf rənt /

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This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.


adjective

without interest or concern; not caring; apathetic: his indifferent attitude toward the suffering of others.

having no bias, prejudice, or preference; impartial; disinterested.

neither good nor bad in character or quality; average; routine: an indifferent specimen.

not particularly good, important, etc.; unremarkable; unnotable: an indifferent success; an indifferent performance.

of only moderate amount, extent, etc.

not making a difference, or mattering, one way or the other.

immaterial or unimportant.

not essential or obligatory, as an observance.

making no difference or distinction, as between persons or things: indifferent justice.

neutral in chemical, electric, or magnetic quality.

Biology. not differentiated or specialized, as cells or tissues.

noun

an ethically or morally indifferent act.

a person who is indifferent, especially in matters of religion or politics.

adverb

Archaic. indifferently: I am indifferent well.

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Origin of indifferent

1350–1400; Middle English (adj.) <Latin indifferent- (stem of indifferēns). See in-3, different

OTHER WORDS FROM indifferent

in·dif·fer·ent·ly, adverb qua·si-in·dif·fer·ent, adjective qua·si-in·dif·fer·ent·ly, adverb su·per·in·dif·fer·ent, adjective

su·per·in·dif·fer·ent·ly, adverb

Words nearby indifferent

indie, Indienne, Indies, indifference, indifferency, indifferent, indifferent gonad, indifferentism, indifferent tissue, indigence, indigene

Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2021

How to use indifferent in a sentence

  • Americans who are indifferent to the risk posed by the virus would be unlikely to embrace such a reintroduction.

  • If he's that indifferent to that perilous dynamic right after Justice Ginsburg's disastrous choice to not retire, presidential arm-twisting probably won't do much good.

  • Others may be disillusioned, frustrated and even afraid, but nobody should feel indifferent.

  • After years of being mostly indifferent to podcasts, the world's tech platforms — as well as the largest terrestrial radio broadcasters — have grown interested in them as they battle on every front of the digital ad market.

  • I, on the other hand, am an indifferent cook whose dinner parties have become legendary for how awful they were.

  • However, as she feared, The Bell Jar appeared to indifferent notices and the launch—which Ted attended—was rather low-key.

  • The immigrants can stay, because they are victims of indifferent authorities just like we are.

  • Because we have so little skin in the game, it seems that the public is indifferent.

  • Communist-era clerks were famously rude and indifferent, because they had no motive to make people happy.

  • Yet, according to the complaint, Berger was "deliberately indifferent" to these allegations against Gibney.

  • The reformers of the earlier period were not indifferent to the need for centralized organization in the banking system.

  • She stabbed him, noting the effect upon him with a detached interest that seemed indifferent to his pain.

  • Thus arrayed I fixed myself on the porch, to be smoking my pipe in a careless, indifferent way when she came.

  • Indifferent health, for he was delicate too, was one of the bonds between us.

  • I have elsewhere spoken of the indifferent figure made by most Englishmen at public speaking.

British Dictionary definitions for indifferent

indifferent

/ (ɪnˈdɪfrənt, -fərənt) /


adjective

(often foll by to) showing no care or concern; uninterested he was indifferent to my pleas

unimportant; immaterial

  1. of only average or moderate size, extent, quality, etc
  2. not at all good; poor

showing or having no preferences; impartial

biology

  1. (of cells or tissues) not differentiated or specialized
  2. (of a species) not found in any particular community

Derived forms of indifferent

indifferently, adverb

Word Origin for indifferent

C14: from Latin indifferēns making no distinction

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Medical definitions for indifferent

indifferent

[ ĭn-dĭfər-ənt, -dĭfrənt ]


adj.

Characterized by a lack of partiality; unbiased.

Not active or involved; neutral.

Undifferentiated, as cells or tissue.

The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.

What Is a Word for Not Caring

Source: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/indifferent#:~:text=adjective,or%20preference%3B%20impartial%3B%20disinterested.

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