Neutral in a sentence as a noun

He is not a neutral, objective source of information on the subject.

I'd like to propose using a more neutral phrase, like "hire away" to describe this practice, instead of "poach".

His position on the matter does not appear to have been content-neutral: he complied with previous orders.

He does it while pretending to be a neutral arbiter of fact, showing no skepticism at all about official claims.

Oh, poor MIT, all they did was actively help the guy who wanted Aaron thrown in prison for three and half decades* while pretending to be neutral.

There's two sides of the story and I think it would have been better if a neutral party heard both sides instead of public summary execution.

As soon as people realize that .com/.net/.org are not neutral, but under US jurisdication, they will move to other TLDs operated in countries with more liberal laws.

Neutral in a sentence as an adjective

It also illustrates the complexities behind making software portable - in this case, using the nation-neutral place separator.

"Which is fine, if you're on one of the teams that likes to innovate, but I'd just suggest that there's probably a more neutral phrasing that might allow a candidate to respond "I prefer to use existing solutions to problems, and here's why".

Imagine Apple, Facebook or whoever controlled the Internet like Google does:How long would it take until they abused their power?If someone is dominating the web it's Google and looking at their power and how much traffic they movetheir actions feel balanced and neutral compared to any other player.

Who wouldn't be envious of such incredible, valuable, and morally-neutral abilities as he described them?I've read the letter several times over, and I'm still amazed at how effective it is at garnering empathy from the reader and cultivating a sense that the author is an impressive individual who has triumphed over adversity after a great struggle.

Because she really is too touchy about this""she's raging over and reading so much into a statement that is, by normal standards, extremely neutral, leads me to believe that even if she has been directly accused of being too emotional in the past, then maybe there's something to the accusations""Playing the sexism card every time you run into a bad manager with a dysfunctional team seems like wasted effort to me.

Almost the entire piece does nothing but cite facts, such as: the dropping of the nuclear bombs does not figure significantly in historical records of the Japanese leadership's discussion about surrender; the Japanese war council decided on August 8 not even to discuss the Hiroshima bombing; damage to Hiroshima and Nagasaki was not out of scale with the earlier fire-bombings of other cities; Japanese leaders had expressed a willingness to sacrifice their cities if necessary; Japan's war strategy was predicated on the Soviets staying neutral; and so on.

Neutral definitions

noun

one who does not side with any party in a war or dispute

adjective

having no personal preference; "impersonal criticism"; "a neutral observer"

See also: impersonal

adjective

having only a limited ability to react chemically; chemically inactive; "inert matter"; "an indifferent chemical in a reaction"

See also: inert indifferent

adjective

not supporting or favoring either side in a war, dispute, or contest

adjective

possessing no distinctive quality or characteristics

adjective

having no hue; "neutral colors like black or white"

See also: achromatic

adjective

lacking distinguishing quality or characteristics; "a neutral personality that made no impression whatever"

adjective

having no net electric charge

See also: electroneutral