Partiality in a sentence as a noun

I think this is a really small nitpick which does not change the partiality of the sentence.

There is no evidence of partiality on his part in the facts presented, only on the part of his hosts.

Total functions embed into partial ones, which is why we have a partiality monad.

I don't agree that the difference between the two phrasings changes the partiality of the sentence.

Irrationality and partiality are one in the same.

Non-termination makes perfect sense, but would you mind sharing a layman explanation of what you mean by the effects of partiality?

/sIn all seriousness there is no partiality to StackExchange - as one can remain completely anonymous.

> functions are functions in the algebraic senseThis is a minor nit, but there are effects in pure Haskell functions, namely partiality and non-termination.

Given that he expects to find everything was done correctlyI don't think that stating expectations is necessarily indicative of partiality, he may just be expressing his current thinking.

Hammonds legal team stated that Kavalers status as both a victim of the alleged crimes of the accused and an attorney to many other victims creates an appearance of partiality too strong to be disregarded, requiring disqualification.

Partiality definitions

noun

a predisposition to like something; "he had a fondness for whiskey"

See also: fondness fancy

noun

an inclination to favor one group or view or opinion over alternatives

See also: partisanship