Sentiment
in sentence
863 examples of Sentiment in a sentence
I hate you!" Now just imagine that
sentiment
with a machine that can outthink you and is heavily armed.
I think we would all understand the
sentiment
that Woody Allen expressed when he said, "I don't want to achieve immortality through my work.
But the pro-EU
sentiment
in Turkey in the past decade has become almost an Islamic cause and supported by the Islamic liberals and the secular liberals as well, of course.
And while I appreciated the sentiment, I actually needed the deadlines.
The second explanation is that in many times and places, there is a widespread
sentiment
that life is cheap.
I think this
sentiment
is particularly relevant to science education.
Now, I really appreciate that
sentiment
from them, but the reality, when you look at this slide is, not only do they have the capability, the capability already exists.
The
sentiment
is Marlene Dietrich.
There is a very common
sentiment
that arises in this debate, even among people who are uncomfortable with mass surveillance, which says that there is no real harm that comes from this large-scale invasion because only people who are engaged in bad acts have a reason to want to hide and to care about their privacy.
As you can see here, this Stanford-based system showing the red dot at the top has figured out that this sentence is expressing negative
sentiment.
Here's another thing we're doing: During the talks this morning, we've been automatically scraping Twitter for the TED2015 hashtag, and we've been doing an automated
sentiment
analysis, which means, are people using positive words or negative words or neutral?
It's a
sentiment
that's pretty common among female engineers that I work with and that I know.
The novelist Cao Xueqin illustrated this Buddhist
sentiment
that romantic love is folly in one of China's greatest classical novels, "Dream of the Red Chamber."
When you look at when anti-Muslim
sentiment
spiked between 2001 and 2013, it happened three times, but it wasn't around terrorist attacks.
"He felt his own age, forty-four ..." wrote Mailer in "The Armies of the Night," "... felt as if he were a solid embodiment of bone, muscle, heart, mind, and
sentiment
to be a man, as if he had arrived."
If you agree with that sentiment, and if you agree that we need a critical mass of informed citizenry, you will realize that I need you.
In the last two years, we have seen an escalating anti-refugee
sentiment.
Unfortunately, since the Nixon administration, the political
sentiment
regarding social mobility has radically shifted away from government mandates to economic security to a neoliberal approach in which the market is presumed to be the solution for all our problems, economic or otherwise.
Anti-gay
sentiment
was gaining national momentum, especially in the form of California’s Proposition 6.
"Don't give me more information, just tell me what to do," was a
sentiment
we heard over and over again.
Well, that's a nice
sentiment
and all, but only if it actually includes all kids.
And I was really in tune with the protests, the sit-ins, the anti-Vietnam sentiment, and I really felt there was a need to question authority.
(Speaks Spanish) But there were many other people who were mourning the death of Chavez, so there was a divided
sentiment
in Venezuela.
Obviously, here we have JFK with that incredibly simple and powerful formulation, "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country," an incredibly noble
sentiment.
Again, a
sentiment
that was so noble and beautifully put 40 years ago, and a beautiful dream 40 years ago, but now with the huge advances in information technology, with the massive changes in behavioral economics, with all that we know about how you advance well-being, that if we combine those insights of giving power to people, and using information to make that possible, and using the insight of going with the grain of human nature, while at the same time, understanding why people behave in the way they do, it is a dream more easy to realize today than it was when it was made in that beautiful speech 40 years ago.
I'm afraid that a lot of people take that
sentiment
to mean that we don't have to do the sorts of things that Al Gore is trying so hard to get us to do.
I am not happy with that
sentiment
at all.
STOP-LOSS is a 21st Century John Wayne Film dealing with some anti-war
sentiment
but clearly ending on the note that "If you are a MAN in today's society, you get your act together and march off to war with your buddies."
The daughter perceives what the viewer perceives, but such intelligent perceptions must give way to the shallow
sentiment
of the husband who is blanked out on both the realities of his wife and daughter.
All I can do is echo the
sentiment
already expressed by some of the other commenters.
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