Confusables Entry 18 / 1011 60-second read

Disinterested vs. Uninterested

Having no stake in the outcome versus having no interest at all.

The comparisoni

✗ Wrong

The referee yawned, disinterested in the match.

A referee should be disinterested — that’s the job. The word you want for bored is UNINTERESTED.

✓ Correct

The referee yawned, uninterested in the match.

Now the image tracks: someone whose attention has wandered.

More examplesii

01

He was disinterested in the meeting and kept yawning.

He was uninterested in the meeting and kept yawning.

Yawning = bored. UNINTERESTED is the word for not caring.

02

I need an uninterested friend to tell me if this dress works.

I need a disinterested friend to tell me if this dress works.

A friend with no stake in the answer — DISINTERESTED. An uninterested friend would just scroll on their phone.

The ruleiii

DISINTERESTED = impartial. UNINTERESTED = bored.

A disinterested party has no personal stake in how something resolves. An uninterested party just doesn’t care.

Notesiv

Register

Edited writing keeps the distinction. In speech, DISINTERESTED and UNINTERESTED are often swapped — but the nuance is useful enough that good writing preserves it.

Watch for

Judges, referees, and neutral arbiters are DISINTERESTED — that’s the job. Bored party guests are UNINTERESTED.

Memory aidv

Remember it like this

Jane Austen’s heroines are often celebrated for being ‘disinterested’ — they judge suitors on character, not on fortune. That’s the high-minded sense the word still deserves.

In the wildvi

Real-world-style usage — how this looks in a sentence people would actually write.

  • The negotiation succeeded because both sides accepted a disinterested mediator.
  • She wasn’t uninterested — just tired. After a coffee, she was the most engaged person in the room.

Test yourselfvii

Which fits: ‘A good judge must be _____ in the outcome.’

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