UNCONCERNED vs DEGAGE: ADJECTIVE
- Not worried, anxious or apprehensive.
- Indifferent and having no interest; aloof.
- Not concerned; not anxious or solicitous; easy in mind; carelessly secure; indifferent
- Not anxious or apprehensive; unworried.
- Not interested; indifferent.
- Lacking in interest or care or feeling
- Easy in mind; not worried
- Not occupied or engaged with
- Showing lack of emotional involvement
- Free and relaxed in manner
UNCONCERNED vs DEGAGE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not worried
- Easy in mind
- Synonyms Unconcerned at, for, about. With at, unconcerned means not anxious in view of something that is or happens; with for it means not anxious for the safety or success of some object of interest or desire: unconcerned at the successes of a rival; unconcerned for one's own safety. With about it generally means the same as with for, but sometimes the same as with at.
- Not concerned; not anxious; feeling no concern or solicitude; easy in mind; not interested; not affected.
- N/A
UNCONCERNED vs DEGAGE: RELATED WORDS
- Insensitive, Unsympathetic, Apathetic, Unmoved, Oblivious, Degage, Casual, Detached, Insouciant, Blithe, Uninvolved, Blase, Untroubled, Nonchalant, Indifferent
- N/A
UNCONCERNED vs DEGAGE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Insensitive, Unsympathetic, Apathetic, Unmoved, Oblivious, Degage, Casual, Detached, Insouciant, Blithe, Uninvolved, Blase, Untroubled, Nonchalant, Indifferent
- N/A
UNCONCERNED vs DEGAGE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- He remained unconcerned about what happened to me.
- Because of the unconcerned states and more symptoms.
- His reports are dire, but Zoetebak seems unconcerned.
- Congo, but most Americans seem unaware or unconcerned.
- Borodin remains unconcerned about repercussions from his activities.
- Petunia continued to chew in an unconcerned fashion.
- Elizabeth was not unconcerned; she remonstrated to James.
- Sodom is unconcerned about the poor and needy.
- GE Monogram is unconcerned about this new development.
- How can you be so unconcerned with death?
- Chaplin come volplaning through the castle gate, garbed as a degage porter.