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- Dictionaryimpartial/ɪmˈpɑːʃl/
adjective
- 1. treating all rivals or disputants equally: "the minister cannot be impartial in the way that a judge would be"
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able to judge or consider something fairly without allowing your own interest to influence you: The jury has to give an impartial verdict after listening to all of the evidence. impartiality. noun [ U ] us / ɪmˌpɑr·ʃiˈæl·ɪ·t̬i / scientific impartiality. impartially. adverb us / ɪmˈpɑr·ʃə·li /
The meaning of IMPARTIAL is not partial or biased : treating or affecting all equally. How to use impartial in a sentence. Impartial vs Partial Synonym Discussion of Impartial.
Impartial definition: not partial or biased; fair; just. See examples of IMPARTIAL used in a sentence.
Someone who is impartial is not directly involved in a particular situation, and is therefore able to give a fair opinion or decision about it. As an impartial observer my analysis is supposed to be objective. Careers officers offer impartial advice to all pupils.
adjective. us / ɪmˈpɑr·ʃəl / Add to word list. able to judge or consider something fairly without allowing your own interest to influence you: The jury has to give an impartial verdict after listening to all of the evidence. impartiality. noun [ U ] us / ɪmˌpɑr·ʃiˈæl·ɪ·t̬i / scientific impartiality. impartially. adverb us / ɪmˈpɑr·ʃə·li /
To be impartial is to be objective, so you don’t mind one way or another how something is going to turn out. It’s important for jurors to be impartial when reaching a verdict, rather than allowing biases and preconceptions affect their judgment.
Definition of impartial adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.