English edit

Etymology edit

ultra- +‎ impersonal

Adjective edit

ultraimpersonal (comparative more ultraimpersonal, superlative most ultraimpersonal)

  1. Extremely impersonal.
    • 1987, The Arizona Quarterly, page 241:
      She is a simple, friendly, naïve woman, who is chronically depressed because of her inability to make friends in the ultraimpersonal places in which she and Coverly must live.
    • 1989, Foreign Films, page 104:
      Jean-Luc Godard's fifth film is an ultraimpersonal exercise on the subject of war.