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Discover Ludwig'opposing attitudes' is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it when referring to two or more stances, points of view, or opinions that are in direct opposition to each other. For example, "The debate between the two candidates featured opposing attitudes on the economy."
Exact(18)
On a more personal level, Mr. Xu, a scholar of Zen Buddhism, says he often tries, futilely, to reconcile opposing attitudes of West and East in his work.
In their arguments to the board, the state and Mr. Penry's lawyers reflect opposing attitudes toward the administration of the death penalty.
Often there was a deliberate melding of opposing attitudes — the army-style cropped hair and longer bangs, boots versus sandals and dark, smudgy tones lightening to brighter colors.
There are two parts to the book ("Everything Begins" and "Elsewhere"), so the poems display opposing attitudes to the spiritual demands of self-discipline, if not to the physical.
Other emotional recollections include the story of a woman who gave up wearing miniskirts in college after being raped (she refused to stop wearing her beloved boots); the anxieties about wedding attire expressed by two lesbians whose families take opposing attitudes to their nuptials; and the decision by a cancer survivor to have a tattoo on her newly reconstructed breast.
A tension between two opposing attitudes was paradigmatic of Hook's involvement in Marxism during that period.
Similar(42)
Slang is used for many purposes, but generally it expresses a certain emotional attitude; the same term may express diametrically opposed attitudes when used by different people.
"Act Without Words II" finds the actors employing their considerable skills as physical comics to portray men who march through their empty daily routines with diametrically opposed attitudes.
Radicals including Foucault and RD Laing are equated with the evolution of pharmaceuticals (there's a jar of Largactil on display) when they represent diametrically opposed attitudes.
In 1964, a cobbler sticking to his last, Stoppard wrote a ninety-minute TV play called "This Way Out with Samuel Boot," which he equipped with a pair of Boots, who represent diametrically opposed attitudes toward material possessions.
If he is of a fiery temperament, prone to enthusiasms and lashing out in wrath against what he deems to be false, he can, like Nietzsche, embrace contradictions and sponsor opposed attitudes.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com