different between unemotional vs callous

unemotional

English

Etymology

un- +? emotional

Adjective

unemotional (comparative more unemotional, superlative most unemotional)

  1. Showing little or no feeling.
    An unemotional person
  2. Reasoned and objective, involving reason or intellect rather than feelings.

Synonyms

  • (showing little or no feeling): dispassionate; See: Thesaurus:alexithymic

Antonyms

  • (showing little or no feeling): passionate

Translations

unemotional From the web:

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callous

English

Etymology

From Latin call?sus (hard-skinned), from callum (hardened skin) + -?sus.

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /?kæl?s/
  • Rhymes: -æl?s
  • Homophone: callus

Adjective

callous (comparative more callous, superlative most callous)

  1. Emotionally hardened; unfeeling and indifferent to the suffering/feelings of others.
    She was so callous that she could criticise a cancer patient for wearing a wig.
  2. Having calluses.

Synonyms

  • heartless
  • insensitive

Related terms

  • calloused
  • callus

Translations

Noun

callous (plural callouses)

  1. Alternative form of callus

callous From the web:

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  • what's callous in french
  • what's callous mean in spanish
  • calloused what does it mean
  • what to do for a callus
  • callous what is the opposite
  • what causes callus
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