Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"subjectively" Definitions
  1. in a way that is based on a person's own ideas, opinions or feelings rather than the facts
  2. in a way that is based on what is in somebody's mind rather than on facts that can be proved

151 Sentences With "subjectively"

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

Subjectively handling content opens the company to accusations of bias.
Subjectively, the album changed my perception of life and personal feelings.
We ranked them all, totally subjectively, on design, build, and looks.
His main concern, in fact, was color, which he viewed subjectively.
The year 20163 feels, subjectively, like it was a long time ago.
That's why it's really important to focus on how you subjectively feel.
And you can see that, subjectively, people feel good about the economy.
So being hierarchical gets challenging when I subjectively like all of these.
Because while the universe is one objective reality, every organism experiences it subjectively.
Robert counters fiercely, saying that I judge the situation subjectively, and too sentimentally.
Due to the vagaries of the terminology, they tend to be judged subjectively.
But sound too has a very large impact on how we subjectively perceive spaces.
Subjectively, both "Incredibles" and "Solo" are good, solid summer entertainments, derived from established franchises.
Plus, get melatonin, gives you a breathable mood boost after hiking, and subjectively calm breathing.
Motherhood is subjectively one of the most positive, glowing things you can trade off of.
Subjectively, it feels like you start from where you are now and produce a widening circle.
And subjectively, those competitors have more of that hard-to-quantify driving magic in their bones.
Everyone was approaching subjectively, and through the lens of the narrative that they wanted to believe.
As a student nurse, I use two scales to subjectively measure pain in the pediatric population.
No matter how objectively good it might seem, subjectively we think it could have been better.
"I'm trying to encourage people to look at necrophilia more subjectively," she says of her research.
They seemed subjectively better than the basic oral care products I had been using for years.
Subjectively, I'd prefer to have the option to take ultrawide photos over better portrait-mode photos.
I chose the species on the list rather subjectively — they were the most iconic poster children.
Right. Wow. Not just subjectively tasty, but actually the brightest, most explode-in-your-mouth, tasty food.
If the second law of thermodynamics depends subjectively on one's information, in what sense is it true?
Most of us like watching someone subjectively considered outside the norm fix themselves, and join the masses.
Just goes to show — objectively beautiful people are not always the people you subjectively want to spoon.
Increased isolation More subjectively, the Charlottesville backlash appears to be accelerating a process of isolation for Trump.
It might be less subjectively spiritual or profound, and it very possibly would not work at all.
Then, they were asked to subjectively rate the wine, with and without the wide range of cheeses.
Instead of subjectively judging somebody's influence, people rely on the merciless metrics of views and follower counts.
We also don't think the white plastic looks bad; in fact, subjectively, we think it's sleek-looking.
We watch as the people who love him subjectively recreate him, and the effect is hollow and fractured.
The Reno uses a Snapdragon 855 processor, and subjectively feels like the fastest Android phone I've ever used.
And the plot resolves factually, rather than having you see the same story completely subjectively from different perspectives.
He argues that colonialism was "both objectively beneficial and subjectively legitimate" for the colonial subjects in many places.
They present a form of visual hypothesis that is usually heavily researched, subjectively compiled, and flexible in intention.
An average of 6,000 tweets are sent out per second, making it impossible to rate them all subjectively.
Banks could also interpret them subjectively: they might delay sharing data or make them too confusing to be useful.
"That was the whole name of the game, just to subjectively reflect her experience with the camera," Burnham said.
Civilization's end has been announced so often, but happened (although, subjectively, it did from time to time) rather rarely.
He added, "I mean, I take him at his word that, subjectively, that's his version of events," Persky said.
DS: As an example, you point to density as an objective qualifier and crowding as something that's subjectively understood.
The truth becomes murky as the history of this man they have all loved is subjectively recorded for posterity.
The truth becomes murky as the history of this man they have all loved is subjectively recorded for posterity.
It's not about what makes the animals fly better or run faster, it's about what the animal itself subjectively enjoys.
Fitch's base-case assessment of banks' intrinsic profiles considers relative loss-absorption capacity rather than subjectively adjusting reported NPL data.
Have you seen patterns as to what people will subjectively consider good art or Oscar-worthy art versus what isn't?
In other words: Women can become physically turned on while looking at pornographic images, but subjectively wouldn't experience any desire.
One hundred thousand Amex points are subjectively worth $22,2000, but the card has a ton of other valuable benefits, too.
He calculated that a machine built to gradually slow its computations, periodically entering states of hibernation, could persist, subjectively, forever.
I'm going to write very broadly and subjectively about trends in the race without using hard data or discussing policy.
Unlike the other two metrics, personality is judged subjectively and is decided by admissions officers who have not met the applicants.
But a person who is losing just a few hours a night won't realize this; they will subjectively say they're fine.
We asked all of the participants how many minutes they "subjectively" felt like they could spend reading during that same hour.
Those who subjectively judged their debts to exceed the value of their assets were also more likely to have higher blood pressure.
Because administrators subjectively decide which prospective speakers are controversial, they become de facto censors when student groups are unable to ante up.
Subjectively, most of us went through what Erica is experiencing when we were teenagers, terrified by the insistent promptings of our libidos.
Martin said that Santos clearly showed "somewhat bizarre behavior" by which Roselle could have "subjectively" felt that he might have been in danger.
Humans tend to place subjectively higher probabilities on negative outcomes than positive outcomes and assign greater weight to negative news than positive news.
The decision stated that banning Mathis from using the girls' bathroom "creates an environment that is objectively and subjectively hostile, intimidating or offensive."
"You can imagine, if we look subjectively at their DNA, we could predict what will taste better or worse to people," Reed said.
In that world, I objectively or subjectively using the 43-multiple as fair for the S&P, and we're now past Labor Day.
For anyone watching the women's free skate, 1.31 points feels like an arbitrary number because we aren't often asked to subjectively quantify sports.
You subjectively experience the results of your choice, while in a parallel reality another version of you experiences the result of the opposite choice.
If so, life could be getting much better objectively, on the social scale, without getting all that much better subjectively, on the individual scale.
The big picture: Updates to policies around harassment or bullying are always difficult to negotiate, and sometimes enforce, because they can be subjectively interpreted.
But now there are groups that take these slights subjectively and say regardless of intention, this has hurt me and I internalize it this way.
For example, Cléo from 5 to 7 covers only two objective hours of Cléo's day, but subjectively it feels far longer, given her existential dread.
When companies don't make their promotion guidelines clear, it allows for decisions to be made more subjectively, which is often detrimental to women's advancement prospects.
All are resales rather than glossy new glass condos, and all are subjectively defined as ones with "good bones and good stories," Mr. Chen said.
As a result, a charged employee had little chance of prevailing on the facts if Mueller subjectively believed there was some other basis for dismissal.
Instead, it could be used because "honest 'white heart/empty head' good faith is inconsistent with a subjectively reckless state of mind," the court wrote.
That bit of entrepreneurial light bulb lit up where there was interesting compounds that showed some efficacy subjectively and according to some early clinical trials.
"[Universities] too often attempt to shield students from ideas they subjectively decide are hateful or offensive or injurious or ones they just don't like," she said.
Essentially, his take on VR is that it's an ideal means to build empathy by putting yourself subjectively in the point of view of the protagonist.
In a world where referees "T-up" coaches for far more subjectively determined violations, there is an argument that the coach's box is extraneous, even condescending.
"It is entirely irrelevant when Defendant learned that" the man "is not his father and whether he subjectively intended to provide incorrect information," the government wrote.
The "mind" is real insofar as the lights are on and we're subjectively experiencing things, but it also creates the illusion that we're separate from the world.
Insurers can subjectively deny treatment that health care providers prescribe to their patients and force "unprofitable" patients into therapies that are less expensive and potentially less effective.
Subjectively, I'd say there's something sort of iPhone-ish to these two phones that I don't see in, say, recent Nexus devices, or even the HTC 10.
Pop culture has long since given plenty of trash-as-folk examples of teachers, in some cases, glorifying or vilifying the profession—some accurate, others subjectively stupid.
"People subjectively feel like they are in greater danger than ever before," said Steven Adelman, the vice president of the Event Safety Alliance, a nonprofit trade association.
When a software engineer named Graham Asher suggested in 0003 that Unicode take responsibility for emojis, the consortium demurred on the grounds that pictures were subjectively interpreted.
There is a growing band of trans folk who reject a cis narrative and hierarchy that is subjectively based on us doing just enough to fit in.
But, emotionally, these women all focused on these other factors, constructing narratives that made sense for them -- assigning blame subjectively, not based on science or all the facts.
One hundred thousand Amex Membership points are subjectively worth $2,000, meaning the welcome bonus alone pays for the Platinum Card's $550 annual fee for more than three years.
And while the data shows significant improvements among patients, physicians and parents subjectively reported about the same improvement whether participants had played the therapeutic game or the placebo.
"The thinking, subjectively/objectively is that James Bond only uses the 'best,' and in their minds, the Sony phone is not the 'best'," a subsequently leaked email read.
"The thinking, subjectively/objectively is that James Bond only uses the 'best,' and in their minds, the Sony phone is not the 'best'," a subsequently leaked email read.
"And here it seems that family relationships had a more important direct impact on chronic conditions and how people subjectively rate their health," Thomas wrote in an email.
"They can deny you on the fact that, subjectively, they feel in their mind [the application] is not approvable," Pierre Bonnefil, an immigration attorney in New York, said.
But the hope was just to look at the internet very granularly and emotionally and personally and subjectively, and not in this big, macro term of "cyberbullying" or [something].
Other awards, like the Grammys or the VMAs, send a ballot out to artists, music industry execs and voting member bodies to decide, very subjectively, who lands a nomination.
Each level is described subjectively in terms of the damage a person would witness or the shaking they would feel, rather than a more technical measure of energy released.
However, we've also found that people subjectively report their psychological stress decreasing, so there is a disconnect between what the body is experiencing, and what the individual is perceiving.
The United States finished with bronze, their first medal since 2004 in dressage, which of three equestrian sports in the Olympics is the only one that is judged subjectively.
The intensity is subjectively graded using a variety of measures, including what scientists call the MEQ, for "mystical experience, questionnaire," although Dr. Griffiths allowed that the term is misleading.
And growing acceptance of gender identity as subjectively-experienced, not anatomic, is driving change in understandings of which advantages are and aren't fair when women and men compete separately.
" The judge appears to believe Turner, 20, as he explains his sentencing decision by saying, "I mean, I take him at his word that, subjectively, that's his version of events.
Many things in warfare, naturally, are often a complex byproduct of a range of more subjectively determined factors – impacted by concepts, personalities, individual psychology, historical nuances and larger sociological phenomena.
"The nature of implicit bias is such that you cannot subjectively experience when it's influencing you," said Jack Glaser, a professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley.
"If they're going to position themselves as a tool for advertisers to get their message out there, they cannot subjectively exert that much control over what you can and cannot target."
It began even before he worked in journalism: When Wolfe submitted his dissertation at Yale in 1957, his advisers initially rejected it because he had written it subjectively rather than objectively.
"This suggests that disability classifications occur subjectively and inconsistently, which runs counter to how we perceive and act on disability labels," Shifrer said, which is that they connote a biological difference.
Travel website The Points Guy subjectively values Chase points at 2 cents apiece, so if you're able to redeem your Freedom Unlimited earnings as points, you're looking at 3%-6% back.
"As soon as the officer gets on the stand and subjectively says, 'I was fearing for my life,' many juries are not going to convict at that point," Mr. Stinson said.
At the same time, causes of conflict are often a complex byproduct of a range of more subjectively determined variables – impacted by concepts, personalities, individual psychology, historical nuances and larger sociological phenomena.
I'm not sure subjectively, and I'm not really the expert, I'm just a humble reporter, not a genius investor, but it seemed like the feedback kind of changed just on a whim.
The accepted scientific definition of déjà vu was formulated by South African neuropsychiatrist Vernon Neppe in 1983 as "any subjectively inappropriate impression of familiarity of the present experience with an undefined past".
PicsArt takes a similar concept, but adds a sleeker user interface and processing on your phone rather than in the cloud, which makes the process significantly faster — and, subjectively, better — than Prisma's effects.
A small 2011 study in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine found that people were able to "subjectively relax" once they got used to the initial pain of sitting on the mat.
Travel website (and Business Insider e-commerce partner) The Points Guy subjectively values Amex Membership Rewards points at 2¢ each, so that means a whopping 10% of value back on the bonus categories.
Any time a proposal aims to "keep guns out of the hands of X", there's a 85033 percent chance that "X" will be terribly defined, subjectively determined, and ultimately purely arbitrary in nature.
Second, base royalty prices not on the subjectively-argued value of each individual patent examined in a vacuum, but on the objective value of the entire stack of LTE patents in a phone.
The company chalked this up to a "technical glitch," but the incident was an upsetting reminder that Facebook wields the power to subjectively decide what news is seen by its 1.65 billion users.
As we talked through my critique, he acknowledged the imbalance and ultimately made some minor adjustments, giving greater weight to Reagan's failings (like Iran-contra) while treating Clinton's tenure more analytically and less subjectively.
"[Universities] too often attempt to shield students from ideas they subjectively decide are hateful or offensive or injurious or ones they just don't like," she said in her speech, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.
Rather than subjectively attempting to distill conceptual ideas or his personal life into his work, Stott's drawing inspiration from raw materials: musical reference points like the Slimzee track, as well as his studio equipment.
Trying to pull myself out, which I tried especially, on the investment side, trying to pull myself out subjectively, is that sports betting is just so big ... They announced that it's just been approved.
The cast members' British accents and diffident manners help provide (to American ears, at least) a polite, cushioning distance from accounts of some projects that might objectively (or do I mean subjectively?) be described as inhumane.
That said, just because people who were ovulating weren't drawn to more complex music in this one small study, doesn't mean music doesn't subjectively sound or feel better during that time, as they are two separate things.
We are all beings on the planet, and we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, but don't you fucking dare say something sexist, racist, or anti-LGBT to or about my guests or my co-workers.
Its two curators, Andrea Brandi and Kenya Hara, aimed to subjectively break the full spectrum of human desire down to 100 actions, so they selected single items that correspond with common verbs and housed most in glass vitrines.
The best I, or anyone else, can do, is to describe Kingdom Hearts III subjectively (if critically) and hope you find something in it that's either fascinating enough or repulsive enough to help you make up your mind.
Yet for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the medical stoppage that surprised both Nate Diaz and Jorge Masvidal immediately presented a fresh challenge of how to balance business and competitive factors in a sport where matchups are made quite subjectively.
They further refined the list by excluding outlets that could be considered partisan, "such as Breitbart," the study says—the authors subjectively differentiated partisanship from fake news—and wound up with 21 domains including True Pundit and Denver Guardian.
Yet, that same administration chose to accept the view that, if an individual subjectively feels very strongly that his or her gender identity is at variance with fully functional sex organs, that very strong subjective feeling would change the individual's sex.
To protect itself from accusations of subjectively favouring some search results over others, Google relies on the weight of "good information" to drive out the bad from its results, or making changes to its algorithms that affect all searches equally.
In the book, Haidt and his co-author Greg Lukianoff argue that Generation Z — the group born after 1995 — have been raised to avoid taking risks and to earn "prestige points" by objecting to subjectively controversial jokes in the workplace.
However, the system tends to break down and cause distrust among employees and create a political atmosphere when applied by companies that measure performance subjectively, or companies that demand employee loyalty in exchange for benefits and the promise of career advancement, Michel said.
Here's how it goes: a team subjectively interprets an infraction of those unwritten, subjective rules, and then instructs their pitcher to hit a player with a pitch—typically the best player on the other team, if not the player who committed the gaffe.
This tempest brings together the boom of mobile game development, comedic YouTube Let's Play videos (which subjectively document with commentary the experience of playing a video game), internet community-oriented culture, and an all-around more expansive demographic beyond straight, nerdy males.
"We have put together a strong defense team who have the expertise and experience to rightly present the narrative, through needed due process, which has been subjectively shaped by too many others until now," a spokesman for Weinstein said in a statement.
"Speaking subjectively, there have been other seasons in the recent past that have been notable for the presence of icebergs in 'unusual' locations or for the quantity of icebergs that have been observed," said CIS senior ice forecaster Scott Weese in an email.
That distinguishes it from a wide range of other kinds of false statements that people make: This last one is a "demonstrable falsehood," though to know whether or not it's a lie, you would have to know, subjectively, what the person saying it knows.
From the various iterations of his travel ban to stepped-up internal immigration enforcement to wink-nudge encouragement of police brutality and neo-Nazis, Trump is creating an environment that both is subjectively alarming to nonwhites and singles out vulnerable groups for extraordinary levels of suffering.
"The main criteria is that if you're subjectively distressed by the symptoms, like if you're worrying more than an hour a day about various things, that you're having physiological symptoms that make it hard for you to function at work or in relationships," Dr. Chapman says.
He describes a persistent will to death throughout his childhood and adolescence, culminating in his " enlightenment" at the age of twenty-one, which he experienced as a radical disjoining of his physical body and his mind and spirit and, subjectively, as the "death" of that body.
The cotton candy sculptures that dominate Boobroom are deceptively precious—that is, until Wang draws parallels between the frenetic, subjectively violent, and stabby process of needlepoint felting and the hidden physical and psychological violence involved in her own plastic surgery and surgeries she has felt pressured to undergo.
The true threat analysis examines the tweet both objectively (would a reasonable person see this as a threat) and subjectively (knowing what we do from the context of the situation, did this person really mean it when they said, "I want to shoot Donald Trump in the head"?).
" The authors write that the advantage of bouldering over other forms of physical activity or psychotherapy might be explained by the sport's "subjectively threatening situations, demanding focused attention and mindfulness," adding that "its mastery appears to be associated with feelings of self-efficacy and internal locus of control.
Canons, like history, are subjectively constructed: When critics note commonalities, compare imagined regimes, and run through the roll-call—Leni Zumas's Red Clocks, Naomi Alderman's The Power, Christina Dalcher's Vox, Sophie Mackintosh's The Water Cure, to name a few with a strong attendance record—they're cocooning a canon through repeated citation.
The eight months since haven't been great, to be sure, and Trump's behavior has subjectively gotten a little bit worse, but there's no sense that the president is more dramatically unleashed—that without Mattis, Kelly, and former Chief Economic Adviser Gary Cohn, there is no one left to stop Trump.
So I come subjectively to this subject as I note that many years after the Swedish pro Mikael Pernfors inspired some of my generation of hackers to reverse our caps, and years after Australia's Lleyton Hewitt made it definitively a thing in tennis, members of the new wave have acquired the taste, too.
"Reviver is a container for 10 subjectively original meditations from the 2016 Yale MFA graduates on where and how the legacy of photography can be brought to bear on the idea of photography as an independent art form," writes exhibition curator, Charlotte Cotton, a visiting critic in Yale's MFA photography program and the current curator in residence at the International Center of Photography.
" Pope Francis's 2016 encyclical Amoris Laetitia ("The Love of Joy") contained a key footnote considering the idea that, "Because forms of conditioning and mitigating factors, it is possible that in an objective situation of sin — which may not be subjectively culpable, or fully such — a person can be living in God's grace, can love and can also grow in the life of grace and charity, while receiving the Church's help to this end.
"A pastor cannot feel that it is enough simply to apply moral laws to those living in 'irregular' situations, as if they were stones to throw at people's lives It is possible that in an objective situation of sin – which may not be subjectively culpable, or fully such – a person can be living in God's grace, can love and can also grow in the life of grace and charity, while receiving the Church's help to this end."
It took the form of a single sentence, combined with an all-important footnote (number 351, to be precise), observing in part: …It is possible that in an objective situation of sin—which may not be subjectively culpable, or fully such—a person can be living in God's grace, can love and can also grow in the life of grace and charity, while receiving the church's help… And the footnote added that In certain cases this can include the help of the sacraments.
His foreignness—indeed, his official statelessness, for a period—along with the splendeurs of his style alienated him from the Trümmerliteratur movement (Rubble Literature, the direct and even rudimentary immediately-postwar German literature that tried to objectively describe, not subjectively evaluate, the contemporary scene, as a way, perversely, of mitigating its readership's war trauma), and he was too much of a nostalgist for the Vienna of Hermann Broch, Robert Musil, Joseph Roth, and Stefan Zweig to take part in the explicitly experimental Gruppe 47 (a group of novelists, poets, and playwrights that met between 1947 and '67, and included, at various times, and among others, Ingeborg Bachmann, Heinrich Böll, Peter Handke, and Uwe Johnson).

No results under this filter, show 151 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.