[ US /səbˈdʒɛktɪv/ ]
[ UK /sʌbd‍ʒˈɛktɪv/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of a mental act performed entirely within the mind
    a cognition is an immanent act of mind
  2. taking place within the mind and modified by individual bias
    a subjective judgment
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How To Use subjective In A Sentence

  • There will always be debate about who deserves honours, all of it highly subjective.
  • Obviously, the title of ‘best restaurant in the world’ is subjective to the point of lunacy.
  • But these questions are personal and subjective. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ishmael, consequently, also investigates the antithetical approach, the method of pure subjective perception.
  • Favorite ruins that one has visited is a highly subjective subject but that doesn´t mean I can´t publish my favotites list regardless of what others may think. The Veracruz You Do Not Know
  • Supposing the physician can find no tissue damage or that there is an inappropriate relation between objective fact and subjective complaint.
  • The farther to the right the writing slants the more subjective the person is.
  • But it doesn't really matter in the particulars, because it's all totally, utterly subjective.
  • For the romantic and postromantic traditions of poetics in which Benjamin and Adorno participate, modern lyric ambition stands as a, or even the, high-risk enterprise, the "go-for-broke-game" [ "va-banque-Spiel"], of literary art: The lyric poem must work coherently in and with the mediumlanguagethat human beings use to articulate objective concepts, even while the lyric explores the most subjective, nonconceptual, and ephemeral phenomena. Sociopolitical (i.e., _Romantic_) Difficulty in Modern Poetry and Aesthetics
  • On the basis of this mutual agreement of the two parties, according to which each of them defends only his claims and his cause, renouncing all personal or egoistic considerations, the conflict is fought with unattenuated sharpness, following its own intrinsic logic, and being neither intensified nor moderated by subjective factors. Conflict and The Web of Group-Affiliations
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