| 释义 | callouscal‧lous /ˈkæləs/ adjective    callousOrigin:1300-1400 Old French calleux, from Latin callosus, from callus;  ➔ CALLUS not caring that other people are suffering:the callous slaughter of thousands of civiliansThe company showed callous disregard for the safety of their employees.
 A slightly callous, but very practical attitude.At such times l thought their laughter callous and hated them.Call me callous, but I see it as Darwinism.Five days afterwards, callous Paul used the same bat to play baseball.It may have seemed callous to the nurses, but I desperately needed that time to myself.Nor are undertakers alone in careless and callous behaviour.The press, in its callous, cynical way, was suspicious of the pro-gram at first and called it pure symbolism.This occurs not so much because the engineers are callous, but because of a blinkered approach by all parties.
 We were shocked at the callous disregard for human life.  a callous attitude  the callous slaughter of seals—callously adverb—callousness noun [uncountable] |