Imparcial in english
Impartial
pronunciation: ɪmpɑrʃəl part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: ɪmpɑrʃəl part of speech: adjective
In gestures
imparcial = non-biased ; non-judgmental [non-judgemental] ; impartial ; open-minded ; unbiased [unbiassed] ; compromise ; detached ; fair-minded [fairminded] ; non-partisan [nonpartisan] ; just ; neutral ; unemotional ; dispassionate ; objective ; unprejudiced ; even-handed.
Example: We will not disserve readers by instructing them through our subject headings in nonbiased terminology; we will, in fact, be keeping all of our readers in focus.Example: Ageist forms of headings like CHILDREN-MANAGEMENT (instead of the familiar and nonjudgmental CHILD-REARING) and AGED (instead of SENIORS or SENIOR CITIZENS) should not be used.Example: These centres should aim to promote a wide range of free, impartial information in a friendly and confidential atmosphere.Example: Is there any responsiveness at LC to the need for a close and open-minded examination of the problem?.Example: Such criteria would be applied to book lists and the production, selection, and writing of unbiased material.Example: Compromise organization schemes, making allowances for weaknesses of individuals, will naturally be put in place as necessary.Example: The attention good literature pays to life is both loving and detached.Example: We are confident that, after examining both sides of the issue, fair-minded judges will be able to determine who is reliable.Example: To support these ends, the public library must be readily accessible to all, its use must be free of charge, it must be non-partisan and non-sectarian.Example: Since neither position, in the extreme, represents a just or workable solution, a compromise must be introduced.Example: There is an objective, neutral name for those people, and that's Burakumin.Example: He offers an admirably concise and unemotional analysis of the famous Milgram experiment.Example: Mystery and detective stories, love and romance fiction, adventure and western stories, recent novels widely publicized but of little literary distinction, popularizations of current affairs characterized by sensationalism and easy dogmatism rather than by dispassionate and qualified analysis -- these and similar books are widely circulated by the public library.Example: Some say that journalism is not objective; others that it cannot be objective; and still others that it should not be objective.Example: Nationalist backbencher Bonnici has called for an 'unprejudiced' debate on censorship, soon after the Justice Minister proclaimed himself against its total removal in the arts.Example: It is remarkable how even-handed this account is -- Farrell reveals Nixon's flaws but also shows the man's capacity for generosity and kindness.more:
» analizar de un modo imparcial = take + a cool look at .
Example: In recent years some of the more outspoken librarians have been taking a very cool look at their colleagues.» de un modo imparcial = impartially .
Example: Modern governments are prolific publishers of reliable and impartially authoritative information which deserves to be carefully studied.