Indiferente in english

Indifferent

pronunciation: ɪndɪfrənt part of speech: adjective
In gestures

indiferente = listless ; unsympathetic ; indifferent ; half-hearted [halfhearted] ; uninterested ; regardless ; uncaring ; unconcerned ; detached ; impassive ; unengaged ; apathetic ; careless ; feckless ; insouciant ; nonchalant ; nonplus ; nonplussed [nonplused] ; soulless ; unemotional ; lackadaisical ; blasé ; lukewarm. 

Example: Rejuvenation of listless, stagnant, or failing library operations is possible through renewal methods dependent on strengthening the communication function.Example: But of its four sentences, the third was so determined to present a grammatically structured metaphor for its meaning that it dazzled my eye, never mind my already unsympathetic brain.Example: Contrary to popular belief, people who have been deaf from birth are not indifferent to aesthetic literature.Example: Yet the response from government has been half-hearted at best.Example: Other staff of the library remained at best uninterested in the project and at worst resented it as a diminution of traditional library services.Example: What can we do is rethink our query, or we can 'bash on regardless' using the power of the computer to perform lots more searches in the hope that 'something will turn up'.Example: The principal problem which faces archives is that of saving significant material from indiscriminate destruction by ignorant or uncaring owners.Example: Then, with an elfin smile she said: 'You see, I haven't been entirely unconcerned!'.Example: The attention good literature pays to life is both loving and detached.Example: There is a commonly-held stereotype which views librarians as being isolated, uninformed, unengaged, impassive, and either uninterested in, or ignorant of, the world around them.Example: There is a commonly-held stereotype which views librarians as being isolated, uninformed, unengaged, impassive, and either uninterested in, or ignorant of, the world around them.Example: In World War 2 librarians generally sympathised with Britain, but many were isolationist or apathetic during the early years = In World War 2 librarians generally sympathised with Britain, but many were isolationist or apathetic during the early years.Example: They will spend time trying to ascribe reasons to the variations whereas the true facts are that the citer was simply sloppy and careless.Example: The author wrings sick humor from its feckless heroes' forlorn attempts to escape from a drug habit that they do not really enjoy any longer.Example: Adopting an insouciant attitude toward empirical research -- shorn of such seemingly tough-minded concepts as objectivity and transparency -- makes her point more plausible.Example: Certainly the explanation was remarkably in accordance with the nonchalant character of the noble lord who gave it.Example: I remember reading an interview where Boll was nonplus about it, but then days later the site got shut down.Example: Considering all that has happened to them, the cousins were nonplussed.Example: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Example: Australian researchers have observed that four to eight year-old boys who have an unemotional temperament are less responsive to discipline.Example: Perhaps there are extenuating circumstances, but his entire treatment of this today was lackadaisical journalism to put it mildly.Example: It's of some comfort to us Brits that the French really aren't so blasé about infidelity after all.Example: His performance received lukewarm reviews from the press but ovations from the audience.

more:

» de un modo indiferentelistlessly .

Example: This film appears to consist of people listlessly hanging around doing nothing very much.

» mostrarse indiferentegive + Nombre + the cold shoulderturn + a cold shoulder tocold-shoulder .

Example: Sorry Castlegr, I thought that by giving you the cold shoulder you might get the hint and realise the bond has gone.

Example: With its usual rhetoric, Iran has turned a cold shoulder to the latest sanctions.

Example: He cold-shouldered his teammates, who cold-shouldered him back.

» volverse indiferentebecome + blaségrow + blasé .

Example: Spain is full of fabulous churches and cathedrals but you can become blase if you view too many.

Example: After decades of growth, there are new signs that consumers are growing blase about coupons.

Indiferente synonyms

fair in spanish: justa, pronunciation: fer part of speech: adjective, noun neutral in spanish: neutral, pronunciation: nutrəl part of speech: adjective moderate in spanish: moderar, pronunciation: mɑdɜrət part of speech: adjective inert in spanish: inerte, pronunciation: ɪnɜrt part of speech: adjective inferior in spanish: inferior, pronunciation: ɪnfɪriɜr part of speech: adjective apathetic in spanish: apático, pronunciation: æpəθetɪk part of speech: adjective ordinary in spanish: ordinario, pronunciation: ɔrdəneri part of speech: adjective impartial in spanish: imparcial, pronunciation: ɪmpɑrʃəl part of speech: adjective deaf in spanish: sordo, pronunciation: def part of speech: adjective, noun immaterial in spanish: inmaterial, pronunciation: ɪmətɪriəl part of speech: adjective unbiased in spanish: imparcial, pronunciation: ənbaɪəst part of speech: adjective passable in spanish: pasable, pronunciation: pæsəbəl part of speech: adjective tolerable in spanish: tolerable, pronunciation: tɑlɜrəbəl part of speech: adjective unimportant in spanish: sin importancia, pronunciation: ənɪmpɔrtənt part of speech: adjective uninterested in spanish: desinteresado, pronunciation: ənɪntrəstəd part of speech: adjective so-so in spanish: regular, pronunciation: soʊsoʊ part of speech: adverb unconcerned in spanish: despreocupado, pronunciation: ənkənsɜrnd part of speech: adjective unreactive in spanish: no reactivo, pronunciation: ənriktɪv part of speech: adjective unbiassed in spanish: sin sesgo, pronunciation: ənbaɪəst part of speech: adjective
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