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17 Sentences With "more dispassionate"

How to use more dispassionate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "more dispassionate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "more dispassionate". Mastering all the usages of "more dispassionate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That is one reason MacKenzie suggests relying on a presumably more dispassionate professional money manager.
If I was a more dispassionate, regular documentarian, that would be questions on the clipboard.
Sure, your cousin, Sheila, might be a whiz with numbers, but it's best to have someone a little more dispassionate.
A rather more dispassionate analysis might suggest that United, the biggest club in the world's biggest league, can hardly avoid scrutiny when it stutters.
Zodiac combines intense "you are there" moments with a more dispassionate docu-realism, as it evokes the shaggy fashions and urban blight of the early 1970s.
One could picture a version of this film made in a more dispassionate mode, with the same aesthetic but no context as to whose life this was.
A more dispassionate reading of the shutdown's political fallout, as Senate negotiations point to a possible end, suggests that Mr Trump may suffer no worse than a bruising stalemate.
Yet the party's elected leaders, and many of its candidates, are far more dispassionate, sharing a cold-eyed recognition of the need to scrounge for votes in forbidding precincts.
Mr. Betts would seem to be taking a more dispassionate God's eye view, in which the divisions within a single home are revealed to mirror the blind, selfish individualism destroying an entire nation.
A more dispassionate review of Mr. Barr's memo shows that he was trying to prevent an unprecedented expansion of a federal criminal statute intended to prevent crimes such as destroying evidence, bribing prospective jurors, intimidating witnesses and the like.
For a more dispassionate critique of Mrs Clinton, who is reckoned to be the second-most-unpopular presidential nominee ever, after her Republican opponent, Donald Trump, listen to some of the less partial operatives and politicians who have worked with her over the past 2250 years.
See The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939) and The Sea Hawk (1940). In response and reaction to this hyperbole, modern historians and biographers have tended to take a more dispassionate view of the Tudor period.
The research behind this map, in addition to its mathematical nature, made it a standard for maps to come. It had a large impact when it was published, underscoring the French strength in New France in the early 18th century, and it stood out as an early example of a more dispassionate, scientific type of map relative to the impressionistic ones of centuries before.Alan Morantz, Where is Here? Canada's Maps and the Stories They Tell, (Toronto: Penguin Books, 2002), 42–5.
Lampião, recent sculpture Despite his history of brutal acts and savagery, there was enough in his undoubted courage, his many fights against heavy odds, his occasional acts of mercy and charity, his conventional piety and calculated courting of publicity to ensure that Lampião entered Brazilian folk-history as a hero.Chandler, pp. 3–5 One of the more dispassionate analyses of Lampião concluded that, if he was a hero, he was an anarchist hero who forged a prominent place for himself in a society and political environment where people put their own interests above all other considerations.Singelmann, pp.
Pennsylvania was the first state to repeal the death penalty for "sodomy" in 1786 and within a generation all the other colonies followed suit (except North and South Carolina that repealed after the Civil War). Along with the removal of the death penalty during this generation, legal language shifted away from that of damnation to more dispassionate terms like "unmentionable" or "abominable" acts. Aside from sodomy and "attempted sodomy" court cases and a few public scandals, homosexuality was seen as peripheral in mainstream society. Lesbianism had no legal definition largely given Victorian notions of female sexuality.
In some of the lighter landscapes in this > exhibition, Miss Bellette seems to have been trying to solve some of the > particular difficulties of painting Australian landscapes. The clear, strong > light tends to flatten the form and bleach the colour; a problem that > doesn't lend itself to the dramatic tensions and dark moods that are > characteristic of her work. It requires a colder and more dispassionate > approach. But when she finds landscapes to her taste, such as the rugged > hills and beetling clouds in No. 8, the earth decaying with erosion in No. > 19, or the prickly desolation of "Rough Country", No. 14, she handles them > with great skill and effectiveness.
Dr. Wen, played by Charles Chun, was an attending surgeon who mentored Turk and the Todd for their first three years at the hospital. He tended to be very serious and business-like, and was one of very few characters not treated comically (although a couple of attempts were made, such as when he and Turk argued over what song to play during a surgery and when he pushed Turk to help him beat Dr. Cox and J.D. at wheelchair racing). Dr. Wen was more dispassionate and modest than most surgeons, but he did have an egotistic, competitive side; he competed against Dr. Cox in a wheelchair race between the medical and surgical branches. He was one of the few characters to refer to Turk by his first name, Christopher.

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