{s} not personal, not referring to a particular person or subject; lacking friendliness or warmth, inhuman, detached; of a verb form which lacks a specific subject (Grammar)
If you describe someone's behaviour as impersonal, you mean that they do not show any emotion about the person they are dealing with. We must be as impersonal as a surgeon with his knife + impersonally im·per·son·al·ly The doctor treated Ted gently but impersonally
disapproval If you describe a place, organization, or activity as impersonal, you mean that it is not very friendly and makes you feel unimportant because it involves or is used by a large number of people. Before then many children were cared for in large impersonal orphanages
An impersonal room or statistic does not give any information about the character of the person to whom it belongs or relates. The rest of the room was neat and impersonal
having no personal preference; "impersonal criticism"; "a neutral observer" not relating to or responsive to individual persons; "an impersonal corporation"; "an impersonal remark
ımpersonally
Heceleme
im·per·son·al·ly
Etimoloji
[ (")im-'p&rs-n&l, -'p&a ] (adjective.) 15th century. Middle English, from Late Latin impersonalis, from Latin in- + Late Latin personalis personal.