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105 Sentences With "opines"

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

"I think that was perfect," he correctly opines upon concluding.
"You find that in a great artist too," he opines.
"They [the government] don't want you to read it," Johnson opines.
"The clamour for change is only getting more vocal," she opines.
Kato Kaelin is a b-list actor who opines about sports.
As one user opines on Sonic Forces, another laments the Trump presidency.
"In reality, most of them are economic migrants," opines one immigration official.
"You look like Napoleon Dynamite in drag," opines one anonymous keyboard warrior.
"It's in some ways a continuation of the industrial revolution," Jules opines.
" Later in the book, he opines, "Love your haters, they're your biggest fans.
" A wise clerk opines, "In Mexico, the sun only sets for the rich.
And he opines on the qualities of his potential Democratic challenges in 2020.
His speech about "techno-geeks" is beyond weird: "We're all savages," he opines.
Josh opines that her extensive work in opera may have informed her approach.
"I love Shakespeare," one actor opines, tearing the flesh off a decomposing arm.
Donald J. Trump often opines on the economic risks of manufacturing American products overseas.
How about the Jacksonville Hillarys, one owner exclaims, or the Kansas City Islams, another opines.
He carries a pistol on his hip and opines on the plight of hardworking Americans.
"They seem to be on some kind of fishing expedition at my client's expense," Cochran opines.
"He's more than a skateboarder, he's more than a celebrity, he's our soulmate," one Scummy opines.
"The thing about desire is that there is no there there," the semiotics professor solemnly opines.
"Unfortunately photography doesn't change the world," Iturbide pessimistically opines in the documentary, and in sense, she's right.
"I'm not really the person who opines on people's health," Eric Trump told WPHT Radio in Philadelphia.
The auction is hosted by eBay, and CEO Devin Wenig opines on his industry's relationship with the Tenderloin.
"Pouring good, pricey wine into fondue is basically a waste of money," opines Daniel Gritzer at Serious Eats.
"I think I would be offended if a guy expressed any preference at all," my friend M. opines.
It's that when even a mainstream media outlet opines approvingly on "racial profiling," you know change is afoot.
Paulson later started a China-focused think tank, for instance, which now regularly opines on the trade war.
Should the new standard be that the Justice Department never opines on whether the president has violated the law?
I can be a talking head who just opines or I can be just a host who asks questions.
Women, the CDC opines, should not consume alcohol unless they're on birth control to avoid these so-called risks.
INSIDER's Manny Ocbazghi opines that Fox News pundits have been echoing white supremacist talking points during segments on immigration.
"You watch all these survival shows and the boys always end up doing worse than the girls," he opines.
There's another side that opines that robot tech is not as great a threat as many seem to believe.
Then he politely opines that his nephew, Tuco Salamanca, should go to prison for assaulting Mike in the previous episode.
But Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz opines in a new report that Comey really should not have done that.
He advises top White House officials, works for GOP campaigns, lobbies for major corporations and opines on political talk shows.
In so doing, he opines, it could be possible once again to forge bipartisan policy compromises and end legislative gridlock.
He's a professor at Harvard Law School who still opines on the Simpson case (as well other topics including education).
This is all perfectly interesting, and Lord King opines on a wide range of issues (though with more breadth than depth).
" Every Voice, another group opposed to free speech, opines, "We know that the game is rigged against the majority of us.
As McCarthy opines, Obama was providing cover for Clinton because Obama, himself, had communicated with her on the unauthorized email account.
In it, Gregory opines on everything from the legacy of slavery to the Harlem Renaissance to the election of Donald Trump.
Raised on Nora Ephron and Jane Austen, she cuts her insufficiently amorous dates short and opines on the death of romance.
Schiller is often the person next to Trump, meaning he regularly opines on politics, policy and everything in between, one aide said.
Here's what's really going on with "Cat Person," the writer opines, and cuts through the wreathing fog of ignorance that surrounds it.
"People have had open marriages forever, because a lot of us would prefer to have more than one relationship," Dr. Fisher opines.
There's a lot the president does that I disagree with, but I'm not some congressman that just opines all day about stuff.
Mr. Jefferies sits at a desk and, somewhat like Mr. Oliver on HBO's "Last Week Tonight," opines on the previous week's events.
In one section, the narrator opines on how 21st-century airports have become meccas, giant cities, for a new citizenry—travellers in transit.
This is all perfectly interesting, and Lord King opines on a wide range of issues (though with more emphasis on breadth than depth).
Joe Gibbons, now of Energy Equity Alliance, opines that magically, electricity will become a luxury product if net metering for solar is allowed.
"I want to see a world with more transcendent musical highs," where "you have more music that's ready for any moment," Martocci opines.
In HBO's Watchmen, the god-like blue man Dr. Manhattan opines about how he could create life inside of a common chicken egg.
A writer who has never met Carrie Fisher or Steve Martin opines that he's somehow demeaning her legacy for referring to her as beautiful.
"They almost certainly won't find anything of interest on the phone," opines Nicholas Weaver, a computer-security researcher at the University of California, Berkeley.
McCarthy (no relation), writing for National Review, opines that the devalued "dossier" might have been the insurance policy that Strzok and Page were referencing.
"Until the Supreme Court opines or until this body takes action, I'm not going to make up law from the Department of Education," she said.
While the show has seen a surge in viewership and buzz amid Alec Baldwin's portrayal of President Trump, Pharoah opines that SNL "gave up" on Obama.
He opines that it is "plausible" that Sessions truly didn't think of the meeting when asked about it in the heat of the moment during Senate testimony.
When Charles blissfully opines that he has "seen enough islands to last a lifetime", watch-checking parents in the audience might be forgiven for muttering their agreement.
" And later, when considering the futility of living in a city where rents skyrocket with seemingly no limit, Kelling opines: "There's no future, but I don't mind.
Although the state has the authority to protect the rights of gay persons, the court opines, it cannot display hostility to religious views in enforcing these rights.
It would be a lawyer in the Justice Department in the Office of Legal Counsel, which opines on the definitive view of the law for the executive branch.
The inevitable Joe Bob Briggs opines twice, for example, that Freddy Krueger is a better villain than Jason, an insight we probably didn't even need to hear once.
RedsAugust 10, 2010 "This is the kind of situation where somebody could get hurt, get their finger stepped on.." one announcer opines at the midpoint of this all-out war.
For the uninitiated, Moore is an ex-Alabama Supreme Court justice and former kickboxer, who openly opines that God's will trumps the U.S. Constitution and that 9/11 was divine retribution.
Michael's odiousness is deliberate ("To seduce," he opines, "a man divines a woman's insecurity and compliments it"), but Finn never feels like a cohesive character, just an arbitrary collection of traits.
In a recent opinion piece, Standing Rock Sioux tribe chairman David Archambault II writes eloquently, but ultimately without precision and factual context as he opines against the ongoing Dakota Access pipeline.
There's just a lot of, just, you open your mouth and you can't get one word out, and there's some guy who talks for 40 minutes and opines, and thought leaders.
For every former Riot employee who opines about the blinkered quality of their rivals in DOTA2, there are redditors eager to champion the Wild West qualities of all other leagues out there.
"We've heard from our customers that it's too hard to understand how sites across the web are using your data, and you don't feel in control of your data when browsing," opines Microsoft.
But the JPMorgan chief also opines on plenty of core bank issues in this year's letter, including what he believes is as much as a trillion-dollar opportunity lost in the mortgage market.
In speeches, in interviews and on Twitter this week, the president has returned to his comfortable role of town crier and news wire as he opines on the news developments of the day.
The future promises only more of the same, we read; McPherson opines, while on the set of a new season of Dallas, that we are "watching history being endlessly repeated" and we are complicit.
Her guru opines, for example, that Wang's Cotard's delusion that she was dead might have been a really dramatic way of Wang's "ensouled part" telling the rest of her about the undiagnosed Lyme disease.
"The U.K. is also going to stand to gain if Europe tightens restrictions because it will soon be leaving the EU and will no longer be subject to the same EU regulations," opines Yip.
" In a new interview for The Katie Couric Podcast, the actress addresses the #MeToo movement, and opines specifically on the allegation made against the Master of None creator and star, who she calls a "friend.
In the first season, Dev is cast in a hardware store ad, and at a bar after shooting one day, he drunkenly opines to the director that the ad feels sexist because it exclusively stars men.
"The End" is the strangest of the six volumes as well as the most self-indulgent: a book about self-obsession that opines at length about what it is like to write a book about self-obsession.
After the Mexican President adamantly but courteously opines that "Mexico cannot pay for that wall," Trump responds "but you cannot say that to the press," all but admitting that he knows Mexico won't pay for the wall.
In an email to The Verge, Dalton Ludwick, the entomology PhD student who coined the #BillMeetScienceTwitter hashtag, pointed out that considering "scientist" a general broad-scale title can cause problems when an astrophysicist, for example, opines on biology.
Mr. Kudlow, often clad in a pinstripe suit and colorful tie, is a frequent pundit on the financial news channel where he opines about everything from the economy to the stock market to tax cuts and free trade.
One might think it wise to hold off on bragging about the "tremendous scale" the building's auditorium offers while Facebook opines that it's just really difficult to scale-up content moderation operations in Myanmar in order to prevent genocide.
But it is not so different from President Barack Obama's habit of holding town hall-style meetings both in the United States and overseas, often with students, where he often opines widely and spontaneously on a range of topics.
Lauren McNamara, a trans activist and videoblogger who opines under the name Zinnia Jones, knew Manning online long before she blew that fateful whistle; she confirms the character that so many other trans people would later come to admire.
Back in 1962, Jack engages Bob in an extremely heavy-handed discussion of how whiskey ages better than women: "Broads, they just get sour," he opines, in a line so tacky that even Stanley Tucci can't make it work.
Diving into a chart of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), Keene opines that the ETF will have a hard time getting about $3003, a level that roughly corresponds to a record high for the S&P 500.
The opinion is a thorough and surgical takedown of the government's position on the All Writs Act, one that combs through all the relevant Supreme Court precedent, analyzes its statutory construction, and even opines on what the Founding Fathers intended.
The nine-page document was accompanied by a letter from Zuckerberg in which he opines on "Facebook's commitment to the Oversight Board", as his header puts it — also dropping the word 'independent' in favor of slipping into a comfortable familiar case.
In the case of Bitcoin, Bianchi opines that its adoption in Argentina is driven in large part by a wealthy class that has always looked for ways to subvert the country's institutions to protect its wealth and to benefit from speculative financial activities.
And this is fed to us as though it is a situation that puts the economy in some jeopardy, but then Janet Yellen opines that it's OK for unemployment to be 'too low' because we need to get the inflation rate higher.
Those of us with the privilege of platforms, and anyone who opines even in the most intimate quarters about the presidential race, owes Warren -- not the narratives or caricatures or assumptions about electability, but the woman herself -- a watch and a listen.
"I feel for most women out there, a good 20 minutes of foreplay is the very least we need before anything even enters us, which is where the porn industry, and pretty much all men, are getting it wrong," opines a writer for The Huffington Post.
"These modest, meaningless shocks reverberate a little, of course, but are less notable than Mr. Serra's grave self-seriousness and his embrace of so many familiar art film strategies, from nonprofessional actors to long takes, cryptic aperçus and silences," Manohla Dargis opines on Story of My Death (2013).
For a president who frequently opines on whatever is grabbing headlines — from natural disasters to sports championships and celebrity news — Trump has so far been restrained in his comments on the coronavirus, not making himself the face of the battle against an international health crisis beyond his control.
The message—that he works tirelessly and brilliantly for the betterment of his people—does not vary much, regardless of whether Mr Kim is meeting a foreign leader or giving "on-the-spot guidance" at state-owned firms, where he opines on everything from desirable shoe colours to potato-farming.
Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) launched a podcast today called Verdict with Ted Cruz, in which he sits across from a stupendously softball interviewer ("you are not only a senator, you are a constitutional lawyer, one of the brightest legal minds in the country") and opines on the day's impeachment proceedings.
Alongside anecdotes of squatting in her student days with the photographer Mario Testino, and a bygone era in the Vogue office when "feet were on desks, there were a lot more parties and people were very badly behaved," she also opines on the shifting sands upon which the fashion world is based.
That's what made it so fun last year when Seth Meyers invited Leslie Jones to watch Game of Thrones with him: Jones is a serious and enthusiastic Game of Thrones fan — "This is the most where you are like a young, nerdy white 12-year-old," Meyers opines — and also a genuinely funny person.
Father Gabriel used to be right up there with Spencer and Eugene in the Most Irritating Character rankings, but he's redeemed himself of late, so it's particularly satisfying to see him lay the verbal smackdown on Spencer when the guy opines that they'd all be better off if Rick just never made it back from his scavenging mission.
Presumptive Republican nominee Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE opines that global warming is "created by and for the Chinese" to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.
But leaving aside the fact that there is no such thing as non-political art — that Ellis's position as a white, gay, wealthy cis man has as much influence on his perspective as Barry Jenkins's perspective as a black straight man has on Moonlight ("dour and downbeat," Ellis opines) — Ellis's ostensible love for style is not evident in the clogged and uninteresting White.
"Woman is defective and misbegotten, for the active force in the male seed tends to the production of a perfect likeness in the masculine sex; while the production of woman comes from defect in the active force or from some material indisposition, or even from some external influence; such as that of a south wind, which is moist," Aquinas opines in 1485 meteorological yawnfest Summa Theologiae.
" In a recent editorial calling our case against Berkeley "deeply unfair," The Washington Post opines that: "The Justice Department filed a statement in San Francisco federal court urging the judge to reject Berkeley's motion to dismiss it — no doubt pleasing those on the right, President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE included, who love to hate Berkeley.

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