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15 Sentences With "be ambivalent about"

How to use be ambivalent about in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be ambivalent about" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be ambivalent about". Mastering all the usages of "be ambivalent about" from sentence examples published by news publications.

HE KNOWS HOW IT SOUNDS, to be ambivalent about the kinds of opportunities he's had.
On the whole, the medical field seems to be ambivalent about the national health insurance.
While I might be ambivalent about these apps as reading platforms, though, writing on them is awesome.
Lindgren wanted this map to wake up listless Canadians who may be ambivalent about these closures and contractions.
Schemansky could be ambivalent about the fame and fortune that never accrued to him in any great measure.
Those who might be ambivalent about abortion should realize that these strictures can apply to them as well.
And I found him to be ambivalent about trash picking, which he has been doing full time for six years.
If not for my precarious reproductive situation, I probably would have pretended to be ambivalent about kids for 10 more years.
But it was unclear if Park can continue to represent the country diplomatically when other countries might be ambivalent about scheduling summit meetings with her.
But if all I can harp on is battery life—a thing most Apple Watch users seem to be ambivalent about anyway—then what is there really to complain about?
There are good reasons to be ambivalent about the agreement that have nothing to do with pessimism and aggressive intentions but with paramount concern for the protection of innocent civilians both in Iran and outside its borders.
A lot of administration and faculty and staff might be ambivalent about what's happening with the choir or the debate team, but you say a sports team is going to the championship, and they'll pay close attention.
A romantic poem, influenced by Lord Byron's "Parisina" (from which comes the epigraph to Chapter I), "Boyarin Orsha" also reflects Lermontov's interest in Russian folklore and history. The poem's action takes place in the time of Ivan Grozny and the Livonian War (1558-1583). The author seems to be ambivalent about the moral choice his hero makes: fighting successfully for personal rights and freedom, Arseny commits treason and finds himself siding with the enemy, fighting his own people.
For instance, it does not say what the results of the rape kit and fingernail kit were, or even if they were processed. It also records subcutaneous pooling of blood in Lam's anal area, which some observers suggested was a sign of sexual abuse; however one pathologist has noted it could also have resulted from bloating in the course of the body's decomposition, and her rectum was also prolapsed.Autopsy report, 12. Even the coroner's pathologists appeared to be ambivalent about their conclusion that Lam's death was accidental.
A meet-semilattice is an algebraic structure \langle S, \land \rangle consisting of a set S with a binary operation ∧, called meet, such that for all members x, y, and z of S, the following identities hold: ; Associativity: x ∧ (y ∧ z) = (x ∧ y) ∧ z ; Commutativity: x ∧ y = y ∧ x ; Idempotency: x ∧ x = x A meet-semilattice \langle S, \land \rangle is bounded if S includes an identity element 1 such that for all x in S. If the symbol ∨, called join, replaces ∧ in the definition just given, the structure is called a join-semilattice. One can be ambivalent about the particular choice of symbol for the operation, and speak simply of semilattices. A semilattice is a commutative, idempotent semigroup; i.e., a commutative band.

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