Immaterial in a sentence as an adjective

Whether the CEO is a fighter pilot or not should be immaterial to purchasing an MTA.

It's immaterial whether Collins told the author they didn't care about the post or not.

Google being a private company is immaterial - they are not self-censoring, but complying with US law.

The money is almost immaterial, the rest of the consent decree is interesting, since Path is now stuck doing stuff for 20 years.

The "relevancy" of the questions to the day-to-day work is immaterial.

Even if we have immaterial souls that don't obey the laws of physics, why do some brain lesions cause weirdly specific impairments to our thought process?

The difference between someone who makes 140k+benefits and someone who makes 200k+benefits is immaterial to a family of four bringing in 60k.

The Church's status as a religious institution is largely immaterial to this perception.

Many times, what a company "saves" in negotiations is immaterial relative to the hiree's compensation.

What's interesting is that the sophistication of the attack is immaterial to the fact that they achieved a significant security disclosure.

It's immaterial what she did because nothing excuses throwing someone in jail indefinitely for not paying a fine they can't afford, driving up their debts by charging them for every day they spend in jail, denying them due process, etc.

Retail banks are not routinely losing customer dollars to online breaches in their own systems; virtually all of them also have infrastructure in place to make any such potential losses immaterial to actual customers.

Immaterial definitions

adjective

of no importance or relevance especially to a law case; "an objection that is immaterial after the fact"

adjective

without material form or substance; "an incorporeal spirit"

See also: incorporeal

adjective

not consisting of matter; "immaterial apparitions"; "ghosts and other immaterial entities"

See also: nonmaterial

adjective

not pertinent to the matter under consideration; "an issue extraneous to the debate"; "the price was immaterial"; "mentioned several impertinent facts before finally coming to the point"

See also: extraneous impertinent orthogonal

adjective

(often followed by `to') lacking importance; not mattering one way or the other; "whether you choose to do it or not is a matter that is quite immaterial (or indifferent)"; "what others think is altogether indifferent to him"

See also: indifferent