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At odds in a sentence

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Sentence count:122Posted:2017-06-07Updated:2020-07-24
Similar words: oddsodds and endstoddytoddletoddlerADDStodayoddMeaning: adj. in disagreement. 
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31. Indeed, some of the individuals cited above would unquestionably find themselves at odds with certain of our conclusions.
32. At odds of about eight to one, however, I was overwhelmed, seriously injured and left for dead.
33. Clinton and congressional Republicans have been at odds over a plan to balance the federal budget in seven years.
34. Indeed, the logic of commercialism may lead the enterprise to pursue activities at odds with other government objectives.
35. Crucially, though, you can see intuitively that totipotency and differentiation seem to be at odds with each other.
36. First, the political demands on public enterprises lead to objectives that are confusing, changeable and often mutually at odds.
37. Poor leadership might also lead to conflict, with the goals of individuals or groups diverging and at odds with each other.
38. Their pleasure was tempered with concern that the policy change was at odds with what they requested.
39. However, public perception of risk is often at odds with the objective measures used by engineers.
40. Beefy has backed himself to complete the 23-day marathon hike in 130 hours at odds of 16-1.
41. The theories which sociologists and economists use to explain business life are almost entirely at odds with one another.
42. Environmentalists and representatives of the timber industry, nearly always at odds, find themselves supporting a policy of increased burning.
43. The organization that compulsively seeks to minimize the costs of its actions is for ever at odds with the reality of its performance.
44. David disliked this trait of Harriet's, a fatalism that seemed so at odds with the rest of her.
45. Living at such close quarters with them, Anne found herself at odds with the princesses.
46. This was at odds with the view of mathematics and the theory of learning underpinning the innovation with which she was involved.
47. There are laughs to be had in putting James at odds with his own Americanness, and indeed his own prototypical modernity.
48. Far from it, what they say for public consumption appears to be at odds with what they are saying privately.
49. Sometimes these two books are at odds with one another.
50. The two sides have been at odds in recent years as reformists tried to implement changes.
51. While my first injury had been an occasion of oneness, the second put us at odds.
52. The two sides are also at odds over the timing of any pay increase the pilots may receive.
53. The government decision to raise taxes was at odds with their policies on inflation.
54. The traditional liberal interpretation is rooted in an approach to history fundamentally at odds with that of Soviet historiography.
55. More often, however, navigation engineers were at odds with drainage men,[http://sentencedict.com/at odds.html] especially when they were working on existing rivers.
56. That decision is at odds with the fact that consumer organisations have been established to monitor larger privatised industries.
57. Certainly, such views as these do not sit comfortably with managerialism and are equally at odds with restricted professionality.
58. Price and the number purchased vary directly. and these real-world data seem to be at odds with the law of demand.
59. The young composer at odds with his family, who want him to follow a less daring course.
60. Improvisation is at odds with the legitimate caution in managerial concerns over decision making, strategy organization design, and compliance.
More similar words: oddsodds and endstoddytoddletoddlerADDStodayoddstodgyto dateto deathcustodywell-to-doup to datemastodonup-to-datesoddenshoddydodderodditynoddlecoddlefoddercustodialcustodiantroddennoddinggood daygoddessput to death
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