Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The quality of being
uninterested .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Such personal interest on the part of employers in their employees leads up to a clue to that other branch of the uninterestedness of labor—its lack of identification with the welfare of capital—its lack of any feeling of loyalty toward the capitalist.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
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Concerning the uninterestedness of labor and its too common lack of any identification with capital, we must also look beyond labor itself to find the full responsibility of this evil.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
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Such personal interest on the part of employers in their employees leads up to a clue to that other branch of the uninterestedness of labor—its lack of identification with the welfare of capital—its lack of any feeling of loyalty toward the capitalist.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Concerning the uninterestedness of labor and its too common lack of any identification with capital, we must also look beyond labor itself to find the full responsibility of this evil.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Concerning the uninterestedness of labor and its too common lack of any identification with capital, we must also look beyond labor itself to find the full responsibility of this evil.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Concerning the uninterestedness of labor and its too common lack of any identification with capital, we must also look beyond labor itself to find the full responsibility of this evil.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Concerning the uninterestedness of labor and its too common lack of any identification with capital, we must also look beyond labor itself to find the full responsibility of this evil.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Such personal interest on the part of employers in their employees leads up to a clue to that other branch of the uninterestedness of labor—its lack of identification with the welfare of capital—its lack of any feeling of loyalty toward the capitalist.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Such personal interest on the part of employers in their employees leads up to a clue to that other branch of the uninterestedness of labor—its lack of identification with the welfare of capital—its lack of any feeling of loyalty toward the capitalist.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
-
Such personal interest on the part of employers in their employees leads up to a clue to that other branch of the uninterestedness of labor—its lack of identification with the welfare of capital—its lack of any feeling of loyalty toward the capitalist.
Black and White T. Thomas Fortune 2007
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