Skip to main content

Impartisan

To carry out tasks or mission in a manner impartial to Party Politics, loyalties, advantage or agenda. Inspired by apparent efforts to restrict votes in heavily democratic demographic cities & regions, and easing in Republican regions in a variety of GOP-run States in the 2012 Election, and the need for impartiality in running the collection and counting of votes.
Red State Republican Party's efforts to restrict Democratic Party votes in districts favoring President Obama made clear the need for an impartisan election system.
by PaulW From Santa Clara November 13, 2012
mugGet the Impartisan mug.

impartial

not partial or biased; fair; just
Finally, a fair impartial judge.
by jman3564 December 8, 2014
mugGet the impartial mug.

Impartial

Neither good nor evil, a little a both but mostly neutral.
I am very impartial
by Qwert2o1 January 24, 2017
mugGet the Impartial mug.

impartant

Meaning a great significance or value, the ebonic form of the word important.
"I gots a impartant job coming up."

"Word."
by Kike Man April 10, 2017
mugGet the impartant mug.

impartial

A constant state of being; a means of existing during any kind of nomination, campaigning, or voting period. For clarity, people must be constantly reminded that you do not have an opinion, while simultaneously giving your opinion on the topic.
During the election for the engineering society Stephen yelled I'm impartial through the corridor when he was asked to vote.
by Firehose2.0 November 22, 2016
mugGet the impartial mug.

Impartialising

The act of splitting something that is whole into many different whole subparts.
I am impartialising my music releases into singles, EPs and albums.
by KEkdisone September 16, 2023
mugGet the Impartialising mug.

Impartiality Bias

The bias of believing that one's own judgments are impartial, free from bias, unaffected by interest or identity—while recognizing that others are biased. Impartiality Bias is the conviction that you are the exception, that you see things as they really are, that your judgments are pure. It's the bias of judges who think they're above politics, of journalists who think they're just reporting facts, of scientists who think they're just following evidence. Impartiality Bias makes its holders incapable of examining their own partiality, because they don't believe they have any. It's the bias that denies it's a bias, which is what makes it so powerful.
Example: "He presented his analysis as impartial, unbiased, just the facts. Impartiality Bias meant he never had to examine his assumptions, his interests, his position. His impartiality was invisible to him—not a claim to examine, just a fact about himself. Everyone else was biased; he was just impartial."
by Dumu The Void March 10, 2026
mugGet the Impartiality Bias mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email