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25 Sentences With "unrealistically optimistic"

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

In a work of total fiction, Wiseau's ultimate success would seem unrealistically optimistic.
The analysts also warned that expectations for impactful consolidation among the largest players could prove unrealistically optimistic.
So by using this scenario, the study may be setting itself up for an unrealistically optimistic result.
As great as self-help books can be, they sometimes have a reputation for being cheesy, overly earnest, or unrealistically optimistic.
As gloomy as he is about Russia's current set-up, Aslund appears unrealistically optimistic about what the rest of the world might do.
People also tend to have unrealistically optimistic outlooks about future events and believe that bad things will happen to someone else, experts said.
Several current and former transgender soldiers and their legal advocates, however, told BuzzFeed News that that's an unrealistically optimistic view of what Mattis is saying.
The Correction Officers' Benevolent Association, which represents more than 10,000 correction officers in the city, has criticized the projected number of inmates as unrealistically optimistic.
In other words, it would hamper the ability of the Fed to reject a stress test in which the bank in question made overly convenient and/or unrealistically optimistic assumptions.
This screw-up was particularly upsetting to him, because NASA's unrealistically optimistic odds were the ones used to persuade civilian astronauts like social studies teacher Christa McAuliffe to participate in the flight.
A House Republican task force has concluded that key military intelligence was manipulated to paint an unrealistically optimistic picture of the United States's fight against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
In the event of a failure to reach a deal with the European Union, the idea that Mr Bercow would enable amendments to, say, introduce a second referendum is "unrealistically optimistic", says Hannah White of the Institute for Government, a think-tank.
They are unrealistically optimistic about what a Sanders administration could achieve, unreasonably down on Sanders's rivals, and simply lack appreciation of how small the differences within the Democratic field are, especially compared with the gaping void between essentially all Democrats and all Republicans under modern polarized conditions.
Wake Forest Intramural Law Review, 6, 21. It has also been applied as an epithet for an unrealistically optimistic or naive individual.Culebras, A., 1997: The village idiot. European Journal of Neurology 4, 535–536.
Victor Green (voiced by H.D. Quinn) is a loving, if somewhat distracted, father and a doting husband. He has the ambition of doing great things for his family. He and his son, Max share a positive outlook on life, and a slight tendency to be unrealistically optimistic. He is a mid-level executive at Cucurtown's biggest business, Cutlery Land.
Grandiosity features in Factor 1 Facet 1:Interpersonal in the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) test. Individuals endorsing this criterion appear arrogant and boastful, and may be unrealistically optimistic about their future. The American Psychiatric Association's DSM-5 also notes that persons with antisocial personality disorder often display an inflated self-image, and can appear excessively self-important, opinionated and cocky, and often hold others in contempt.
A cognition that has an epistemic cost can also have an epistemic benefit that would have been unattainable with low epistemically costly means in epistemically innocent. Unrealistically optimistic beliefs, confabulatory explanations, delusions including motivated delusions, delusions in schizophrenia, delusions in depression, and inaccurate social cognition are examples of epistemic innocence. It does not fall into the category of epistemic goodness. The framework determines the relationship between a cognition’s psychological and epistemic benefits.
While identified with conservative politics, Will has criticized a number of individuals and policies associated with the Republican Party and American conservatism. He was among the first to oppose President George W. Bush's nomination of Harriet Miers to the United States Supreme Court. Will was hawkish in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003, and he expressed reservations about Bush administration Iraq policies. He eventually criticized what he said was an unrealistically optimistic set of political scenarios.
Betsy suffers from cancer; Lou refuses to discuss the issue on most occasions, even with her father Hank, and acts vague and unrealistically optimistic about her future when he does. Meanwhile also, Ed Blumquist (Jesse Plemons), the local butcher's assistant in Luverne, comes home to his wife, the hairdresser Peggy (Kirsten Dunst). Everything seems normal during dinner, until Ed, following strange noises from the garage, finds their car with a huge hole in its windshield. He soon finds Rye, badly injured but still alive.
On the other hand, he describes Andy's character as thinly drawn, and calls the episode "disingenuous" in implying that prejudices such as those Andy exhibits—his contempt for "hippies" and immigrants, and support for "traditional marriage"—can be as easily overcome as the episode portrays. He compared the episode negatively to "Bismuth", the previous double-length special. Vrai Kaiser, writing for The Mary Sue, disliked the episode. They felt that the episode was inappropriate for a world in which conservative politics such as Andy's were ascendant, finding its narrative of reconciliation unrealistically optimistic.
During the beginning of the early developments, the researchers were aiming at building entirely automated CAD / expert systems. The expectation of what computers can do was unrealistically optimistic among these scientists. However, after the breakthrough paper, “Reducibility among Combinatorial Problems” by Richard M. Karp, it became clear that there were limitations but also potential opportunities when one develops algorithms to solve groups of important computational problems. As result of the new understanding of the various algorithmic limitations that Karp discovered in the early 1970s, researchers started realizing the serious limitations that CAD and expert systems in medicine have.
George Rodney, formerly of Martin Marietta, was appointed to this position. Former Challenger flight director Jay Greene became chief of the Safety Division of the directorate. The unrealistically optimistic launch schedule pursued by NASA had been criticized by the Rogers Commission as a possible contributing cause to the accident. After the accident, NASA attempted to aim at a more realistic shuttle flight rate: it added another orbiter, Endeavour, to the space shuttle fleet to replace Challenger, and it worked with the Department of Defense to put more satellites in orbit using expendable launch vehicles rather than the shuttle.
Former Challenger flight director Jay Greene became chief of the Safety Division of the directorate. The unrealistically optimistic launch schedule pursued by NASA had been criticized by the Rogers Commission as a possible contributing cause to the accident. After the accident, NASA attempted to aim at a more realistic shuttle flight rate: it added another orbiter, Endeavour, to the space shuttle fleet to replace Challenger, and it worked with the Department of Defense to put more satellites in orbit using expendable launch vehicles rather than the shuttle. In August 1986, President Reagan also announced that the shuttle would no longer carry commercial satellite payloads.
CitiApartments often paid as much as 50% more for a building than its value to the rest of the market, and as a result may have raised overall market prices by 5-10%. This drove away competition from weaker and more cash-sensitive property investors. Starting in late 2006 it bought nearly all of the multi- unit apartments sold in the city as they became available. Critics claimed that the only reason CitiApartments could afford the premium was that it made more money on buildings than companies that operate within the limits of the law, or that it made unrealistically optimistic promises to its lenders about its ability to force rent-controlled tenants out of their apartments.
Dabit claimed that Merrill Lynch had manipulated stock prices by disseminating misleading research, and consequently using its misinformed stockbrokers to artificially inflate the value of its investment banking clients' stock. In this alleged scheme, the research analysts issued unrealistically optimistic reports upon which the brokers relied in advising their clients and in deciding whether to hold on to their own stock, and that both the clients and brokers held on to their stock long past the point at which they would have sold if they had accurate information. By the time the truth was revealed around the time of the Attorney General's investigation, the price of the stocks had plummeted, causing the stockholders to lose value and the brokers to lose commissions when their misinformed clients took their business elsewhere. Dabit's complaint claimed damages on behalf of himself and all class members against Merrill Lynch under Oklahoma state law for breach of fiduciary duty.

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