English to Chinese Dictionary impersonal

impersonal

非人情味
definition
adjective
the impersonal march of progress
not influenced by, showing, or involving personal feelings.
he gradually came to believe in an impersonal God
not existing as a person; having no personality.
translation of 'impersonal'
adjective
非人的,
和个人无关的,
example
The regular corporate structure is so 'impersonal' , they don't get to know the artist.
But a book is always an extension of its author, however 'impersonal' the subject matter.
She knew she'd have to be a little 'impersonal' if she were to help her friend.
The 'impersonal' nature of remote collaboration increased their productivity and facilitated collaborative intellectual contributions.
Both Bactrian and Pagolak recall the mysterious Ursprache of Borges's Tlön, which contains no nouns but only 'impersonal' verbs, and in which famous poems consist of a single enormous word.
I'll never understand how people can take such pleasure in struggling a wonky trolley around endless 'impersonal' aisles of soullessly stacked goods week after week after week.
I was going to do this with bullet points, but in the end it seemed a bit 'impersonal' .
Commercialism is getting more brutal than ever and people are getting more 'impersonal' than ever before.
The subject matter may be 'impersonal' and unemotional but it doesn't make it any more enjoyable to know that.
Living in a digital age makes communication so much easier, yet perhaps more 'impersonal' .
They shifted authority in public life from the personalities of notable citizens to 'impersonal' organizations.
Eighteen per cent of respondents said they preferred other methods of recruitment such as agencies, and would not use a job search website again because of its 'impersonal' nature and lack of accuracy.
E-mails provide instant communication and yet distance the sender because they're so 'impersonal' .
The 'impersonal' nature of major companies is no accident and at the end of the day, too often there is no one person who can be called to account when something goes wrong.
It might suggest a curt, efficient, formal, 'impersonal' , or even angry attitude about the conversation.
God is not a personal heavenly Father but an 'impersonal' force.
The it in suffice it to say is an 'impersonal' or indefinite pronoun, one that functions as a grammatical placeholder without supplying much real meaning.
It also helps a patient feel far more comfortable than in the more centralised and 'impersonal' environment of a larger complex.
I thought I'd left that 'impersonal' world behind.
As with 'impersonal' constructions, referentially deficient subjects usually occur in the independent clause.
In Russian, this sentence is 'impersonal' , without a subject or a predicate, and only Russian case endings indicate the relations between words.
She says department stores with their armies of sales people are too 'impersonal' .
But there is something a little 'impersonal' about the whole affair.
In addition, many Southerners felt these churches to be too large, formal, and 'impersonal' to meet their spiritual needs.
At the time, however, my dad deplored the feeling that he was becoming just another number in an 'impersonal' organization, a cog in the machine.
You may have a tendency to avoid gyms because you think of them as unattractive, boring or 'impersonal' places.
That hostility is triggering a backlash against both existing regimes and the 'impersonal' forces of globalization.
I couldn't bear the thought of her lying in some 'impersonal' place with other people looking at her.
But online stores are cold, 'impersonal' places devoid of any sense of human contact, where every book is merely an itemised commodity.
Without a human being, it was not possible to manage knowledge, or extract it from raw data and 'impersonal' information.
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