Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for indifference. Search instead for indignierende.
Definitions

indifference

[in-dif-er-uhns, -dif-ruhns] / ɪnˈdɪf ər əns, -ˈdɪf rəns /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Treasury curve has taken a “bull steepening” shape that reflects bets on deeper Fed rate cuts and an indifference to inflation risks heading into 2026.

From Barron's

Families feel isolated due to increasingly restrictive border policies and controls in Europe, general indifference and the criminalisation of migrants.

From Barron's

AI-generated entertainment content ultimately fails to engage audiences authentically because viewers seek human creativity and connection, which AI cannot replicate beyond superficial imitation, suggesting the problem may self-correct through consumer indifference rather than intentional resistance.

From Los Angeles Times

There has been "a culture of indifference towards safeguarding" at one of Northern Ireland's biggest and best-known churches, according to a critical report seen by BBC News NI.

From BBC

“This was a period in English culture before blackness acquired its fatal association with slavery,” he writes, identifying a “certain strain of indifference to color” in the thinking of the time.

From The Wall Street Journal