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Statement by a certain advertiser?
Answer for the clue "Statement by a certain advertiser? ", 10 letters:
impersonal
Alternative clues for the word impersonal
Word definitions for impersonal in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ I had no desire to work for a large, impersonal organization. ▪ Just signing your name on a Christmas card seems too impersonal . ▪ The Church has been criticized for being too big and impersonal . ▪ They just handed ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Impersonal \Im*per"son*al\, n. That which wants personality; specifically (Gram.), an impersonal verb.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Not personal; not representing a person; not having personality. 2 Lacking warmth or emotion; cold. 3 (context grammar of a verb or other word English) Not having a subject, or having a third person pronoun without an antecedent.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-15c., a grammatical term, from Late Latin impersonalis , from assimilated form of in- "not, opposite of" (see in- (1)) + personalis "personal" (see personal ). Sense of "not connected with any person" is from 1620s; that of "not endowed with personality" ...
Usage examples of impersonal.
Beyond such important but necessarily impersonal concerns, I would venture to remind you that just as you lost a sworn man in Aiten, I lost a scholar in Geris, a man of much learning who might have aided us both against this threat, though of course, nothing outweighs the loss of both their lives.
Which is to say that the forces at work seem ever more impersonal, more disconnected from individual human activity, more autonomous.
It was very much the kind of house Banks would associate with someone pulling in a hundred grand a year or more, but for all its rusticity, and for all the heat the fire threw out, it was a curiously cold, bleak and impersonal kind of room.
Carlton House Terrace was curiously impersonal, although Burgo Smyth must have occupied it for long enough.
But the Byronic spirit was only superficially assimilated by Pushkin, and the two poems must be regarded as further impersonal exercises on a borrowed theme.
All the rooms of the new house were full to bursting with familiar things made strange and disturbing by their crowdedness and juxtaposition in this new setting, like an unwieldy nightmare into which an entire life has been shuffled out of impersonal malicious glee.
But Herm did not seem to be trying to be charming now, just businesslike and impersonal.
I was now merely a spectator, and from my couch in the big room I could lie and watch the human interplay with that detached, impassive, impersonal feeling which French writers tell us is so valuable to the litterateur, and American writers to the faro-dealer.
When she turned, holding the brief, impersonal note in her hands, he was standing in the open doorway, looking at her with dark, sympathetic, half-smiling eyes, pitying her, making her silent promises to outweigh the cruelty of stonyhearted official departments with the generosity of his affection.
Few of us have ever met an angel, and probably would not recognize it if we saw one, and our images of an impersonal or suprapersonal God are hopelessly subhuman--jello, featureless light, homogenized space, or a whopping jolt of electricity.
The facts were ignored that trade is a bye-product and not an essential factor in social life, that property is a plastic and fluctuating convention, that value is capable of impersonal treatment only in the case of the most generalised requirements.
The man she admired had sent an impersonal card addressed not only to her, but to her father and sister, and for a fraction of a second, Olivia found herself wondering if Victoria was right, and she was jealous.
Functional, impersonal, nothing to have to adapt to, nothing to have to notice, no twee furniture to trip over in the dark on the way to the lav, no nice comments to summon up for an anxious owner over the wheaties in the morning.
Rather than opposing an artistic individualism against an impersonal, collectivist technology, Gaddis investigates their common historical roots as creative collaborations.
The development both of extensive proprietary companies and of government departments with economic functions has been a matter of the last few centuries, the development, that is to say, of communal, more or less impersonal ownership, and it is only through these developments that the idea of organized collectivity of proprietorship has become credible.