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16 Sentences With "differed in opinion"

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

Coats has repeatedly differed in opinion from the President on matters concerning Russia, dating back to his first month on the job.
In this week's Modern Love essay, Ms. Brown recalls their contentious yet loving relationship, where they differed in opinion on almost every topic, but still managed to tackle those differences with love and respect.
He differed in opinion with his cousin and long standing colleague, JRD Tata. While JRD wanted to steer clear of politics, Naval stood as an independent candidate from South Bombay in 1971 but lost elections.
Photographers differed in opinion about color photography when it was first introduced. Some fully embraced it when it was available to the public in the late 1930s, while others remained skeptical of its relevance in the art of photography.
Critics differed in opinion in regards to gameplay; many praised the addition of local cooperative play and the ability to upgrade the MicroBot with new weaponry and features, but many felt the game did not add enough new gameplay elements to the genre to keep the player interested long-term.
Frank, generous, unassuming, intrepid, > compassionate, and pious, he was so highly respected, even by those from > whom he most differed in opinion, that, tho' much of his life had passed in > political contention, he was accompanied to the grave by the sincere and > unqualified regret of his Sovereign and his Country.Rosebery, Windham > Papers. Vol. II, pp. 370–371.
Eayrestown was the first substantial settlement in this area and became the center for commerce because of its sawmill. The history of some of the homes in Lumberton date back to the times of slavery. Each generation of descendants removed from the first settlers differed in opinion about slavery. The spectrum changed from advocacy and tolerance, to passive and active resistance.
Miyake was a Cooperative Nationalist and differed in opinion from Universalists. He felt that Japan was first a member of the Asian community and secondly a member of the global community. Also Japan should hold onto and preserve its cultural heritage from before the Meiji era as it helped to strengthen Asian culture and, by doing so, world culture. Miyake felt Japan should make it its mission to study Asia, oppose western imperialism, and nurture the distinctive Japanese sense of beauty.
Some believed that the WONPR was simply an auxiliary of the AAPA (Association Against the Prohibition Amendment). However, they were independent groups, and differed in opinion on certain matters, such as the WONPR's general endorsement of the Democratic party after they added the wet plank to their platform during the 1932 election. After their organization, they supported the end of Prohibition through legal and political means. During the Presidential and Congressional campaigns of 1932, they supported those who supported repeal, regardless of which party they belong to.
Congregation Temple Israel is a Reform synagogue in Creve Coeur, Missouri, USA, a municipality in suburban St. Louis County. Temple Israel's founders differed in opinion from the leadership of Shaare Emeth, favoring the more liberal political and theological view point that was sweeping parts of Europe and the United States at the time. One of these founders was Rabbi Solomon H. Sonneschein, who became Temple Israel's first rabbi. During the first year of operation, Temple Israel had between 60 and 70 members, and 604 persons attended the first Erev Rosh Hashanah services.
Morris and Millet differed in opinion on the idea; the former felt speed should be reduced five knots, and the latter felt that any steady speed held during the transition would be okay. Captain Brown therefore decided to increase speed to 15 knots, and the engine room replied by increasing power. Around the same time, Lieutenant Arnold located a small buoy with orange-and- white stripes away. Initially this buoy was identified as one of the acoustical range markers as a result of the letter "B" painted on it, but this information was not properly relayed to the rest of the crew.
1613) and Claude (1619-c.1684). After the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Mark and Suzanne's granddaughter Suzanne Martin, daughter of their daughter Rachel, differed in opinion so strongly from her husband Moïse Poitevin, of another large Saumur Protestant family, that they separated: he abjured and stayed in France, but she left c. mid-1688, first to England, where she did her "reconnaissance" at Leicester Fields Huguenot Church, then to Rotterdam where she bore her last-born, Paul Poitevin, in December 1688, whose godfather was Pierre de Monnery, father-in-law of minister and pastor Daniel de Superville.
Two elders, as referenced in Acts, were required for a church to function, and a plurality was required to celebrate the Lord's Supper. The Edinburgh meeting house closed in 1989 when its membership fell to only one elder. To have been married a second time disqualified one for ordination, or for continued tenure of the office of bishop. In all the action of the church unanimity was considered to be necessary; if any member differed in opinion from the rest, he must either surrender his judgement to that of the church, or be shut out from its communion.
Vere states, given the circumstances of Claggart's slaying, condemning Billy to death would be unjust. While critics have viewed Vere as a character caught between the pressures between unbending legalism and malleable moral principles, other critics have differed in opinion. Such other critics have argued that Vere represents a ressentient protagonist whose disdain for Lord Admiral Nelson he takes out on Billy, in whom Vere sees the traits of Nelson's that he resents. argues that Vere manipulated and misrepresented the applicable laws in order to condemn Billy, showing that the laws of the time did not require a sentence of death and that legally any such sentence required review before being carried out.
However, it was eventually decided that Ratcliff did possess all the qualities that were needed to play Sue convincingly and, despite initial objections from Ratcliff's agent who did not approve of her artists appearing in soap operas, she become "hot favourite" for the role. Although auditioning for Sue was done first, the casting could not be confirmed until an actor was found to play her husband, Ali. Ratcliff was brought in at a later date to read scripts with two potential actors, Nejdet Salih and Haluk Bilginer (two out of only three working Turkish speaking actors in London at the time). The creators differed in opinion on which of the two they wanted to have the role; it was initially felt that Ratcliff would "make mincemeat" out of Salih, but following a successful reading, it was eventually decided that Salih and Ratcliff worked as the Osman partnership and were cast as Sue and Ali.
Title page of a 1781 edition of Samuel Johnson's Lives of the Poets Although the quality of Johnson’s writing has guaranteed the survival of his last considerable undertaking, its critical limitations generated published responses almost immediately. One of Johnson’s own friends, John Scott, so differed in opinion with some of his judgments that he wrote essays of his own on individual works by John Denham, John Dyer, Milton, Pope, Collins, Goldsmith and Thomson which were published in 1785 under the title Critical Essays on Some of the Poems of Several English Poets.Google Books When dealing with Goldsmith’s The Deserted Village he takes particular issue with the principles of inclusion in the collection of poets with which Johnson was associated: “The Temple of Fame, lately erected under the title of The Works of the English Poets, affords a striking instance of caprice in the matter of admission to literary honours”, he charged. To Scott the choice of poets seemed lacking in either method or “rational impartial criticism” (p.247).

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