Use "impersonal pronoun" in a sentence

1. Would you prefer impersonal?

2. His voice was coolly impersonal.

3. He was methodical, almost impersonal.

4. 13 He was methodical, almost impersonal.

5. Others see it as impersonal, transcending gender.

6. His manner seemed rather stiff and impersonal.

7. Chid's letters are absolutely impersonal.

8. The restaurant's service was rushed and impersonal.

9. I hate dealing with large impersonal companies.

10. I find the atmosphere there rather impersonal.

11. It is a huge, inflexible and impersonal organization.

12. It was bare, cramped and impersonal.

13. I hate staying in hotels; they're so impersonal.

14. She has a very cold and impersonal manner.

15. Let's keep the criticism general and impersonal.

16. The rest of the room was neat and impersonal.

17. His manner was coolly polite and impersonal.

18. Even his children found him strangely distant and impersonal.

19. Business letters need not be formal and impersonal.

20. He was attentive but impersonal, and esteemed rather than loved.

21. It is a huge(http://Sentencedict.com), inflexible and impersonal organization.

22. 3 I find the atmosphere there rather impersonal.

23. I think we should keep things entirely impersonal.

24. Time of itself is a mere impersonal, abstract term.

25. It's big impersonal overstocked and full of ignorant salespeople.

26. The whole thing was conducted on an impersonal level.

27. Sometimes she seems a very impersonal, even unkind, mother.

28. Things like machines may develop or neglect certain things in people ...Machines make our life impersonal and stultify certain elements in us and create an impersonal environment.

29. A vast, impersonal, abstract pattern stands be-hind this legend.

30. I had no desire to work for a large, impersonal organization.

31. Indefinite Pronouns as Antecedents - When an indefinite pronoun is the antecedent of a personal pronoun, the personal pronoun must agree in number with the indefinite pronoun

32. His touch was as impersonal as that of a doctor.

33. It became an impersonal, distant, uncaring, social and welfare service.

34. Some may feel that because God is invisible, he is impersonal.

35. They can be seen as abstract, impersonal information about land and resources.

36. Before then many children were cared for in large impersonal orphanages.

37. We must be as impersonal as a surgeon with his knife.

38. And it frightened her. It made him seem impersonal, almost to idiocy.

39. Practice: Pronoun-Antecedent agreement

40. Many Archetypes take the form of mythic characters who appear in various impersonal guises

41. A psychic gestalt may seem impersonal to you, but its energy forms your person.

42. An appositive is a noun or pronoun that renames another noun or pronoun. Appositives are placed directly after the noun or pronoun they identify.

43. The relationship between Paul and Timothy was not businesslike, cold, or impersonal.

44. Earthquakes, famine, and disease are impersonal forces that wreak havoc on millions of people.

45. Giving people time to get to know one another will make the meeting less impersonal.

46. Spanish has three impersonal forms: the infinitive, the gerund, and the past participle.

47. The churches have made God appear to be nameless, abstract, impersonal, beyond human comprehension.

48. My slight personal acquaintance with the subject of all this discouraging impersonal solemnity seemed slightly ridiculous.

49. The essential ingredient is a nightmarish sense of bewildered helplessness against a vast sinister, impersonal bureaucracy.

50. They just got the pronoun wrong.

51. She didn't want to work for a big corporation where everything was so impersonal.

52. Here you should use plural pronoun.

53. Not quite artificial , for the poet was always in love with love , an impersonal love .

54. It is also said that Hinduism believes in an impersonal rather than a personal Deity.

55. The room told me nothing. just a bare, impersonal space in a cheap, dingy hotel.

56. Synonyms for Avoidant include stand-offish, aloof, cold, distant, haughty, remote, reserved, detached, impersonal and unapproachable

57. Though this active force is impersonal, it can, like a powerful breath of air, exert power.

58. An Antecedent comes before a pronoun

59. Correlative conjunctions also make pronoun agreement tricky

60. Aught is a pronoun meaning anything whatever

61. 14 Is a relative pronoun necessary here?

62. 2 Here you should use plural pronoun.

63. Most commonly, an Antecedent has a personal pronoun, as it does in the previous example (her), a demonstrative pronoun

64. More meanings for أنتم ('Antum) you pronoun.

65. An Appositive is a noun or pronoun

66. 15 This is a first personal pronoun.

67. 13 Each other is a reciprocal pronoun.

68. The impersonal ego is the assimilated or appropriated values of our culture--the Confucian true self

69. An Appositive is a noun or pronoun — often with modifiers — set beside another noun or pronoun to explain or identify it

70. (often impersonal or passive) to grieve; distress; afflict: it Aggrieved her much that she could not go

71. The world of institutions and impersonal justice must be held in check by the an-Archical responsibility for the

72. Reflexive pronouns can emphasize a noun or pronoun.

73. There is also an impersonal voice, which can be described as the passive voice of intransitive verbs.

74. (following a pronoun object): I like them Both

75. ( She uses a derogatory form of the pronoun. )

76. The Voice-Adjunction theory of agentive ‘by’-phrases and the Icelandic impersonal passive* Anton Karl Ingason, 1Iris Edda Nowenstein, Einar Freyr Sigurðsson2 1University of Iceland and 2University of Pennsylvania Abstract We investigate ‘by’-phrases in the Icelandic impersonal passive and argue that

77. What Is an Appositive Phrase? An Appositive is a noun or pronoun that renames or identifies another noun or pronoun in some way

78. As a pronoun: Both arrived at the same time

79. 8 Most transitive verbs can take a reflexive pronoun.

80. In ` This is my bike', ` this'is a demonstrative pronoun.