How to Use subjectivity in a Sentence
subjectivity
noun-
Over at the Cider House kitchen in the U.K., guest subjectivity was on display in full force.
— Amy Drew Thompson, orlandosentinel.com, 18 Mar. 2022 -
And there is some subjectivity in all this type of stuff.
— Adam Jude, The Seattle Times, 22 Oct. 2018 -
But at the end of the day, Hiserodt said, subjectivity also plays a key role.
— New York Times, 8 July 2021 -
There are too many data, and thus too much subjectivity, to make such a claim.
— WSJ, 31 Jan. 2023 -
Many people in the league cited the presence of too much subjectivity in the reviews.
— Barry Wilner, The Denver Post, 28 May 2020 -
There's no subjectivity on this one, dudes and dudettes.
— Amy Bartner, Indianapolis Star, 3 July 2019 -
She is known for almost all of her projects to be avant garde combined with Black subjectivity.
— Essence, 12 Sep. 2023 -
And these looks reveal all the subjectivity of the person behind the camera.
— Jeffrey Sipe, Variety, 7 Oct. 2021 -
But in the end, there's always going to be a certain degree of subjectivity and bias.
— Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 3 Dec. 2018 -
Some states have intervened to take subjectivity out of the process.
— Collin Binkley, The Christian Science Monitor, 1 May 2023 -
The stakes of the show didn’t just expand to include the malefactor’s subjectivity and despair.
— Lili Loofbourow, Washington Post, 13 Sep. 2023 -
The intensity of the disease as well as the subjectivity of treatment mean that a visit to a new doctor can feel like the cruelest game of roulette.
— New York Times, 30 May 2021 -
The guiding impulse seems to have been to purge every hint of warmth or subjectivity from the frame, and to subject the Hösses to a gaze as inhuman as their own.
— Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times, 14 Dec. 2023 -
What confused me more was the subjectivity of the CSM article...
— Staff, The Christian Science Monitor, 14 Aug. 2017 -
What interests me is how subjectivity changes, how those buttons and rocks that fastened us—to repeat your great word—to the world, lose their hold on us.
— Daniel Drake, The New York Review of Books, 13 Nov. 2021 -
What you binge-watch from the comfort of your couch or bop your head to is a matter of subjectivity and personal preference.
— Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 8 Feb. 2020 -
The politics and subjectivity in these early rankings are easy enough to sniff out.
— Joseph Goodman | Jgoodman@al.com, al, 20 Nov. 2019 -
But subjectivity is hard to expunge even in physics, the foundation on which science rests.
— John Horgan, Scientific American, 2 Feb. 2022 -
At the center of the album is a duo of songs using Kingdom Animalia to break out of human subjectivity.
— Spencer Kornhaber, The Atlantic, 9 Mar. 2018 -
In this world of subjectivity, in this world of luck, in this world of timing and all the other things that come into it, talent only accounts for 10 or 20 percent, at most.
— Brian Davids, The Hollywood Reporter, 24 Jan. 2022 -
That creative subjectivity is the prime element that’s missing from the new movie.
— Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 15 Feb. 2023 -
The cat, though, is pure subjectivity and unalloyed id.
— New York Times, 18 Aug. 2021 -
But what happens next enters the world of subjectivity: the words your customer uses to speak about your store and their experience with you.
— Jeff Giagnocavo, Forbes, 11 Nov. 2022 -
The researchers are well aware of the subjectivity and individuality of the sense of smell.
— IEEE Spectrum, 4 Sep. 2023 -
Numbers sing arias of irrefutable fact that soar above murky choruses of subjectivity, spin, and slant.
— Dan Neil, Car and Driver, 2 June 2020 -
There’s a degree of subjectivity depending on the state of the market, such as whether it’s a trending market or a sideways market.
— Steven Ehrlich, Forbes, 2 May 2022 -
This is work that is not shying away from looking at black female subjectivity.
— John Ortved, Vogue, 18 Aug. 2017 -
Some wine terms might seem self-evident, but their true meaning can be fraught with nuance and subjectivity.
— Dave McIntyre, Washington Post, 21 Aug. 2020 -
Baldoni attempted to introduce more subjectivity, and thus, doubt, into Lively's character Lily's experience of abuse at the hands of Baldoni's Ryle.
— Ryan Coleman, EW.com, 16 Aug. 2024 -
Of course an algorithm won’t capture our minds’ and bodies’ expressive intent and subjectivity—one is built from silicon, zeroes, and ones; the others, from organic elements and hundreds of millions of years of evolution.
— Matteo Wong, The Atlantic, 5 Sep. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'subjectivity.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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