He let out an inhuman moan. She had an almost inhuman desire to succeed.
Recent Examples on the WebHardaway said slavery was racist, sexist, inhuman and immoral.cleveland, 29 July 2022 In the most shocking element, the woman, Kienholz’s wife, is represented as a gray, ruptured, inhuman bag of oozing matter — a nameless, unidentified lump sagging across the seat.Los Angeles Times, 3 July 2022 That same cold and inhuman world of computers could also make Thompson feel isolated and prompt her to act out. Maya Miller, Anchorage Daily News, 19 June 2022 The 18th and 19th centuries were full of wars, too, but no one concluded from them that music should consist largely of dissonant harmonies, inhuman rhythms and charmless sound patterns. Barton Swaim, WSJ, 16 June 2022 Bernie, despite his age, has an inhuman amount of energy, an almost maniacal desire to always move forward, and a stubbornness that would not let a quart of blood on the floor of the Charleston Airport DoubleTree disrupt his day. Ari Rabin-havt, The New Republic, 28 Apr. 2022 What if a large company used infantilizing cutesy advertising, effective PR, and weak government oversight to cover up inhumane, inhuman activities? Ars Staff, Ars Technica, 7 May 2022 Yet the same principle that applies in life applies with equal force in literature: likability is boring and, at the limit, inhuman. Becca Rothfeld, The New Yorker, 9 Mar. 2022 Many Iranians, after 43 years of inhuman theocracy, miss their king. Cyrill Matter, Town & Country, 28 Apr. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English inhumayne, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French inhumain, from Latin inhumanus, from in- + humanus human