express disagreement
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disagreement — n. 1) to express a disagreement 2) to resolve a disagreement 3) a bitter, marked, serious, sharp; slight disagreement 4) a disagreement among, between, with 5) a disagreement about, over * * * [ˌdɪsə griːmənt] between marked over … Combinatory dictionary
disagreement — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ bitter, considerable, deep, major, profound, serious, sharp, significant, strong, substantial, substantive … Collocations dictionary
disagreement — dis|a|gree|ment [ˌdısəˈgri:mənt] n 1.) [U and C] a situation in which people express different opinions about something and sometimes argue ≠ ↑agreement ▪ We ve had a few disagreements , but we re still good friends. disagreement about/over/as… … Dictionary of contemporary English
disagreement — noun 1 (C, U) a situation in which people express different opinions about something and sometimes quarrel: Just because we ve had a few disagreements, it doesn t mean we aren t still friends. (+ about/over/as to): There is some disagreement as… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
express — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} verb ADVERB ▪ well ▪ Perhaps I have not expressed myself very well. ▪ fully ▪ She expresses herself most fully in her paintings. ▪ forcefully … Collocations dictionary
kick against — express disagreement or frustration with. → put the kibosh on … English new terms dictionary
December 2010 — was the twelfth month of that year. It began on a Wednesday and ended after 31 days on a Friday. Portal:Current events This is an archived version of Wikipedia s Current events Portal from December 2010 … Wikipedia
dissent — dis·sent 1 /di sent/ vi 1: to withhold assent or approval unfair squeezeout transactions the kind to which public shareholders seem most likely to dissent R. C. Clark see also appraisal ◇ A shareholder who dissents from a proposed transaction may … Law dictionary
demonstrate — I (establish) verb authenticate, circumstantiate, clarify, confirm, corroborate, display, elucidate, evince, exemplify, exhibit, illuminate, illustrate, indicate, instruct, lay out, make clear, make evident, make plain, manifest, perform, point… … Law dictionary
yes — [[t]yɛs[/t]] adv. n. pl. yes•es, 1) (used to express affirmation or agreement or to emphasize a previous statement): Do you want that? Yes, I do[/ex] 2) (used to express disagreement with a negative statement or command): You can t do that! Oh… … From formal English to slang