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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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61. Square-cut and staid to behold, it packs a potent punch quite at odds with its looks.
62. At odds of 10-1 he bet a hundred pounds he could complete 200 miles in less than nine hours on horseback.
63. It seems that the lamp and control gear industries are at odds with each other.
64. If the police chief and mayor had not been at odds in 1992, we may not have had a riot.
65. They radiated a fierce interest in their work which was at odds with their taciturn manner.
66. His disciplinarian approach was seen to be at odds with West Ham's tradition as a freewheeling and creative team.
67. But the role has put him at odds with the United States and stirred controversy in his own country.
68. This was at odds with everything the rangers had said about Adivassi laziness, Adivassi stupidity.
69. The Buchanan trade plank is at odds with long-standing Republican endorsements of free trade.
70. Britain and France were constantly at odds with each other throughout the negotiations.
71. The two, often at odds during work hours, greeted each other like old friends and made lunch plans.
72. The happy couple warring in public, being at odds over what really was the truth.
73. John Nelson has been re-examining the evidence, and his conclusions are greatly at odds with the story so far.
74. The brokerage we just described is but one example of an enterprise at odds with itself.
75. Although they enjoyed the session provided, it was at odds with their expectations.
76. The interests of scholarship and pedagogy are at odds here.
77. Jaq's sensual lips were definitely at odds with his sceptical ice-blue eyes.
78. It's no necessary to be at odds with them.
79. That's a lesson we badly need to learn if we're going to make sound policy decisions in an era in which science and politics seem increasingly at odds.
80. And no one likes to be at odds with history.
81. Hariri notes that the findings at first glance seem to be at odds with work he and others have done that links particular genetic variants to amygdala activity in humans.
82. The Digital Economy Bill would be at odds with the way the European Commission handles enforce copyright infringements.
82. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
83. A friend - or a sweetheart - may be at odds with you on nobody's favorite day, September 17.
84. However, there are situations where risk reduction and immediate value creation are at odds with each other.
85. Nomadism has always been at odds with the fixed boundaries of the nation state, and over the last few decades controversial government programmes have forced most Bajau to settle on land.
86. Canada and the United States are at odds over the sovereignty of the Northwest Passage that links the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans.
87. Mourinho is said to be at odds with both chief executive Peter Kenyon and owner Roman Abramovich, though Kenyon has rubbished reports.
88. In particular he points out that the notion of entity service delivering, for example, customer information can be at odds with DDD.
89. Perhaps it is time to consign to cultural history the notion that traditional knowledge systems are at odds with the ideals of modern science.
90. Such generosity is at odds with Mr Tyler 's reputation for cost cutting.
More similar words: oddsodds and endstoddytoddletoddlerADDStodayoddstodgyto dateto deathcustodywell-to-doup to datemastodonup-to-datesoddenshoddydodderodditynoddlecoddlefoddercustodialcustodiantroddennoddinggood daygoddessput to death
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