“The referee yawned, disinterested in the match.”
A referee should be disinterested — that’s the job. The word you want for bored is UNINTERESTED.
Having no stake in the outcome versus having no interest at all.
“The referee yawned, disinterested in the match.”
A referee should be disinterested — that’s the job. The word you want for bored is UNINTERESTED.
“The referee yawned, uninterested in the match.”
Now the image tracks: someone whose attention has wandered.
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.
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.
A disinterested party has no personal stake in how something resolves. An uninterested party just doesn’t care.
Edited writing keeps the distinction. In speech, DISINTERESTED and UNINTERESTED are often swapped — but the nuance is useful enough that good writing preserves it.
Judges, referees, and neutral arbiters are DISINTERESTED — that’s the job. Bored party guests are UNINTERESTED.
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.
Real-world-style usage — how this looks in a sentence people would actually write.
Which fits: ‘A good judge must be _____ in the outcome.’