11 sentences with 'opinions'

Example sentences and phrases with the word opinions and other words derived from it.

See sentences with related words


« Management must be open to listening to employees' opinions. »

opinions: Management must be open to listening to employees' opinions.
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« The debate was heated due to the differing opinions of the participants. »

opinions: The debate was heated due to the differing opinions of the participants.
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« In a dialogue, people can exchange ideas and opinions to reach an agreement. »

opinions: In a dialogue, people can exchange ideas and opinions to reach an agreement.
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« The diversity of opinions in the classroom is necessary for a good learning environment. »

opinions: The diversity of opinions in the classroom is necessary for a good learning environment.
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« Sometimes, it is difficult to have a conversation with someone who has very different opinions. »

opinions: Sometimes, it is difficult to have a conversation with someone who has very different opinions.
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« What is certain is that there was no shortage of opinions lending scientific credence to the subject of human-eating plants. »
« As the elevator slowly descended, everyone had to endure the woman's detailed biography, as well as her opinions on a concert she had just attended and on music in general. »
« That's not what Shirley MacLaine wants to hear, and she disagrees, but all she can do is listen and take note, because Stephen Hawking's opinions deserve respect, whether she agrees with him or not. »
« Newspapers became mouthpieces for political positions, expanding the public sphere to an unprecedented extent and, in some ways, sometimes cheapening political opinions to the level of banal slogans. »
« Although opinions will vary, perhaps the most memorable achievement of the Classical Age was in philosophy, primarily through the thought of the most important Greek philosophers of all time: Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. »
« Since all great powers were now significantly (or somewhat, in Russia's case) democratic, the opinions of the average citizen mattered in a way they never had before. Journalism whipped up these opinions and passions by stoking hatred, fear and resentment, leading to a greater willingness to go to war. »

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