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1 impartial
(not favouring one person etc more than another: an impartial judge.) αμερόληπτος,απροκατάληπτος- impartiality -
2 subjective
[səb'‹ektiv]adjective ((of a person's attitude etc) arising from, or influenced by, his own thoughts and feelings only; not objective or impartial: You must try not to be too subjective if you are on a jury in a court of law.) υποκειμενικός -
3 Party
subs.Group of people: P. and V. σύστασις, ἡ.Faction: P. also V. στάσις, ἡ.Political party: Ar. and P. σύνοδος, ἡ.The ties of party: P. τὸ συγγενὲς τοῦ ἑταιρικοῦ (Thuc. 3, 82).The Syracusan party: P. οἱ τὰ Συρακοσίων φρονοῦντες.Phrynichus' party: Ar. οἱ περὶ Φρύνιχον (Vesp. 1302).Be a party to: P. and V. μετέχειν (gen.); see share in.Be jointly responsible for: P. and V. συναίτιος εἶναι (gen.), μεταίτιος εἶναι (gen.).Become a party to a treaty: P. εἰς σπονδὰς εἰσιέναι (Thuc. 5, 40).Be an interested party ( not to be impartial): P. οὐ κοινὸς εἶναι.The parties to a contract: P. αἱ συμβάλλοντες.The parties to a suit: P. οἱ ἀντίδικοι.Social party: Ar. and P. συνουσία, ἡ, σύνοδος, ἡ.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Party
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4 disinterested
[dis'intristid](not influenced by private feelings or selfish motives; impartial: It would be best if we let a disinterested party decide.) αμερόληπτος,ανιδιοτελής
См. также в других словарях:
not biased — index impartial Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
impartial — im·par·tial /im pär shəl/ adj: not partial or biased: treating or affecting all equally im·par·ti·al·i·ty /im ˌpär shē a lə tē/ n im·par·tial·ly adv Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
Impartial — Im*par tial, a. [Pref. im not + partial: cf. F. impartial.] Not partial; not favoring one more than another; treating all alike; unprejudiced; unbiased; disinterested; equitable; fair; just. Shak. [1913 Webster] Jove is impartial, and to both the … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
impartial — (adj.) formed in English 1590s from assimilated form of IN (Cf. in ) (1) not, opposite of + PARTIAL (Cf. partial). First recorded in Richard II … Etymology dictionary
not partial — index competitive (open), general, impartial Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Impartial game — In combinatorial game theory, an impartial game is a game in which the allowable moves depend only on the position and not on which of the two players is currently moving, and where the payoffs are symmetric. In other words, the only difference… … Wikipedia
impartial jury — The provision of the Bill of Rights (Sixth Amendment to Const, of U.S.) requiring that the accused shall have a fair trial by an impartial jury, means that the jury must be not partial, not favoring one party more than another, unprejudiced,… … Black's law dictionary
impartial jury — The provision of the Bill of Rights (Sixth Amendment to Const, of U.S.) requiring that the accused shall have a fair trial by an impartial jury, means that the jury must be not partial, not favoring one party more than another, unprejudiced,… … Black's law dictionary
impartial — im|par|tial [ımˈpa:ʃəl US a:r ] adj not involved in a particular situation, and therefore able to give a fair opinion or piece of advice = ↑fair ≠ ↑biased ▪ We offer impartial advice on tax and insurance. ▪ an impartial inquiry into the deaths ▪… … Dictionary of contemporary English
impartial — [[t]ɪmpɑ͟ː(r)ʃ(ə)l[/t]] ADJ GRADED 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 … English dictionary
impartial — im|par|tial [ ım parʃl ] adjective not connected to or influenced by one particular person or group: Judges need to be impartial at all times. impartial professional advice ╾ im|par|ti|al|i|ty [ ,ımparʃi æləti ] noun uncount ╾ im|par|tial|ly… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English