unsensitive

unsensitive

(ʌnˈsɛnsɪtɪv)
adj
not sensitive
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Furthermore, if [p.sub.y] [right arrow] 0 and X-Pattern is employed, then [[theta].sub.1A] [right arrow] 0, [[theta].sub.1B] function will be unsensitive to the offset [[delta].sub.2] of joint 2.
used thermosensitive doxorubicin-loaded PEGylated liposomes capable of releasing 90% of drug after 30 min at 42[degrees]C compared to less than 3% for unsensitive liposomes [164].
[pollution makes the lake unsustainable] because it would make it like really unhealthy and then not the highly sensitive creatures like the stonefly nymph would live in the lake, only the very unsensitive to pollution bugs would live in it.
Later, Edward Chamberlain (1962), Joan Robinson (1969), and Nicholas Kaldor (1934), among others, explored the significance of "gaps in the chain of substitutes" that might be used to identify distinct market boundaries in common situations where, as the last of these masters put it, "different producers are not selling either 'identical' or "different' products, but 'more or less different products'--the demand confronting them being neither completely sensitive nor completely unsensitive to the prices charged by other producers."
The first movement felt over-relaxed, even rather timid at times, though it was never unsensitive.
my only reservations were about the slightly unsensitive feel of the steering.
In similar fashion, rules play a negative role in Bauman's text and are unvaryingly associated with unthinking and unsensitive (rule-abiding) people, with bureaucratic bigotry or malice, in short, with the ugly face of bureaucracy.