US /ˈsɛntəmənt/
・UK /ˈsentɪmənt/
"I don't think that there was a goal nor some sort of accomplishment that he was looking for in sharing these documents. Of course, there's some anti-government sentiment."
OF COURSE, THERE IS SOME ANTI-GOVERNMENT SENTIMENT.
I think that sentiment is outcomes minus expectations.
I strongly disagree with your sentiment there!
I STRONGLY DISAGREE WITH YOUR SENTIMENT THERE!
And that seems to be the sentiment across the board.
Do I get this right?" And that seems to be the sentiment across the board.
And Bitcoin in particular has a strong bias towards anti-government sentiment and libertarianism.
And Bitcoin in particular has a strong bias towards anti-government sentiment and libertarianism.
Hey, can I just, uh, that, no, I just want to say what a beautiful sentiment I think that is.
Can I just—I just want to say what a beautiful sentiment I think that is.
Which it certainly was. Admiration was the universal sentiment,
But Cambodia also said it wants to live with its neighbours as good friends, a sentiment shared by Thailand that could leave the door open to a diplomatic solution.
But Cambodia also said it wants to live with its neighbours as good friends, a sentiment shared by Thailand that could leave the door open to a diplomatic solution.
Well, I mean, all jokes aside, that's a lovely sentiment.
Well, I mean, all jokes aside, that's a lovely sentiment.
News that two people who had a harrowing break-up are now trying to get back together again a few months or years down the line tends, among sensible people, to raise at the very least suspicion, if not outright irritation and despair. Why are these two cursed lovers heading back to the old chaos and drama? Isn't this just a fantasy sprung from naivety, loneliness and most probably short-term lust? Shouldn't they keep faith with their original choice, double down on the highs and lows of dating and perhaps each buy a dog? And yet, to deny ex-couples any legitimate chance to revisit their situation also feels excessively punitive and in its way naïve, insisting blindly that people can never change, that psychotherapy and introspection, books and conversations, time and long walks have nothing whatsoever to teach us, is as foolish as to assume that change can come readily and lightly. For every misguided attempt to resume a relationship, there must be a proportion of equally misguided refusals to countenance a new start, born not out of wisdom so much as pre-emptive fear and disbelief that people are, occasionally, able to learn a new thing or two. We need to make progress a tool with which to strip the matter of sentiment and rationally distinguish mature from sentimental plans. What follows is a sequence of questions, amounting to a kind of examination, that exes who are meeting up again after a long break should discuss with one another – and as importantly, with themselves – before coming anywhere near to holding hands, let alone – and here we must be very definitive – going to bed.
We need to make progress a tool with which to strip the matter of sentiment and rationally distinguish mature from sentimental plans.