Unspecific in a sentence as an adjective

That's about as unspecific as you can get.

Almost all of the disclosures are vague and unspecific.

If you were that hurt, I don't think posting a string of accusatory but unspecific tweets would help your cause better.

The best thing to do in that case is to file as many broad and unspecific patents as possible to boost your perceived value.

"And it's mostly untrue, to the extent that weasely implications and unspecific statements can be true or untrue.

The entire pitch is frustratingly unspecific about what exactly they're making with their million dollars.

When all you posted was something tiny, however, you're inviting further inquiry by being unspecific and vague.

If we build things that are ambiguous, unspecific for age, gender, race, nationality, etc then the world will be a better and more inclusive place.

In the future, it won't be enough to hit an unspecific infection with an unspecific antibiotic.

The Swedish law is very unspecific here, and just generically defines that unjust terms are grounds enough to nullify a contract either in parts or in full.

Beginners spend precious time trying to understand the concept using flawed guides and tutorials, whereas experts dismiss the term as being to unspecific.

To be honest everywhere that I have applied as a programmer has either had the 24/7 rule or a contract so unspecific that it leads me to think that they will try to take ownership of something I write if it does indeed lead to a valuable product.

I agree with the fact that the website is still a little bit unspecific but this project is backed by Phil Zimmermann, he was the creator of PGP, it doesn't guarantee anything but it definitely means some smart people who are worried about privacy are behind it.

A company which basically consistes of 80% "upper management" positions and barely any "real workers".. \nEspecially when the website is only about marketing claims and very unspecific details.\nI can't even find downloads or documenation..No, i'll stay away.

Not one single cork dork is going to confuse a late harvest reisling with a dry sparkling wine with a chianti either and yet reliably once or twice a year some one brings up that oh hey look some people can be tricked into thinking an unspecific white is red, as if that were the only distinction between wines.

Unspecific definitions

adjective

not detailed or specific; "a broad rule"; "the broad outlines of the plan"; "felt an unspecific dread"

See also: broad