Insulso in english
Insulse
pronunciation: ɪnsʌls part of speech: noun
pronunciation: ɪnsʌls part of speech: noun
In gestures
insulso = listless ; bland ; insipid ; unexciting ; unmoving ; soulless ; vapid ; vanilla ; plain vanilla.
Example: Rejuvenation of listless, stagnant, or failing library operations is possible through renewal methods dependent on strengthening the communication function.Example: While bending over backwards to avoid bias biographies present their subjects' lives in a bland and uninteresting way = While bending over backwards to avoid bias biographies present their subjects' lives in a bland and uninteresting way.Example: Otherwise, the result will probably be too small and insipid to be of any real use.Example: The author argues that the advantages for higher education are unclear, and rather unexciting.Example: The outcome is strangely unmoving.Example: Our deliberate and passionate ambition is to avoid the traps of soulless, dead villages turned into museums, slowly sinking into oblivion.Example: Television has become so vapid and devoid of information that I didn't see the point of watching the presidential debate.Example: And I'm not looking down on people who want to go to sex parties -- although I bet they're way more vanilla than the press is hinting at.Example: Many consider bonds to be the plain vanilla of the investing world, yet they can generate substantial returns.more:
» de un modo insulso = prosaically ; listlessly .
Example: You are about to hear an undistinguished non-expert speak prosaically about the library catalog as it currently is. Example: This film appears to consist of people listlessly hanging around doing nothing very much.