unimaginative

adj
/ˌʌnɪˈmad͡ʒɪnətɪv/

Etymology

From un- + imaginative.

  1. derived from imāginātīvus
  2. derived from imaginatif
  3. inherited from ymagynatif
  4. prefixed as unimaginative — “un + imaginative

Definitions

  1. Not imaginative.

    • For the first ten years of nationalisation a further note of overall gloom was added by the depressing policy of unimaginative Regional colour schemes, indifferently applied.
    • Lighting was unimaginative for the standard stock with naked tungsten filament bulbs and metal reflectors. However, all compartments had individual reading lights above the seats with attractive glass shades.
    • His views were echoed by The Economist, which feared that the effects of modernisation would be no more than "chromium-plated" inefficiency caused by unimaginative railway management and adverse union reaction.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for unimaginative. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA