unworldly in English

adjective
1
(of a person) not having much awareness of the realities of life, in particular, not motivated by material or practical considerations.
she was so shrewd in some ways, but hopelessly unworldly in others

Use "unworldly" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "unworldly" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "unworldly", or refer to the context using the word "unworldly" in the English Dictionary.

1. Alnuin unworldly Antrustion unitrust

2. The Ambiguities resurface in an image of absolutism where obvious falsity and artificiality signify an unworldly godliness

3. What does Bookish mean? Relying chiefly on book learning rather than practical experience; impractical or unworldly

4. Anchoritic: 1 adj characterized by ascetic solitude Synonyms: eremitic , eremitical , hermitic , hermitical unworldly not concerned with the temporal world or swayed by mundane considerations

5. ‘The darkness was unworldly, he thought; objects Blurred into each other, colors shifted to become unnatural.’ ‘Symptoms included nausea, vertigo, headaches and Blurred vision.’ ‘Ask as well about more subtle signs like difficulty with memory, clumsiness, Blurred vision, dizziness, and drowsiness.’

6. Cloistered: 1 adj providing privacy or seclusion “the Cloistered academic world of books” Synonyms: reclusive , secluded , sequestered private confined to particular persons or groups or providing privacy adj of communal life sequestered from the world under religious vows Synonyms: cloistral , conventual , monastic , monastical unworldly not

7. That's what's embarrassing: that in the last twenty-five years, the ideology of the garage-pit has again become so powerful that its representatives no longer have to face criticism, must no longer justify themselves, but rather denounce any kind of critical spirit as unworldly and amoral, knowing full well that force of the masses is on their side, that public discourse swallows up or makes fun of every doubt about the underlying values of society. At the same time, the fears and motivations of neo-conservative high-handedness are easy to comprehend: the outbreak of the Aids pandemic at the beginning of the 1980s, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the increase in Islamic fundamentalism in the 1990s, the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, bracketed by imperialist US wars over oil.