Sentence examples for preferred ambiguous from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

The reason for providing s answers allowing partial-disclosure was based on research by Akabayashi[ 26] which indicated that many Japanese were accustomed to and commonly preferred ambiguous or graded answers rather than polarised ones.

He produced a revision that combined elements of the 1955 Broadway version and his original version, restoring his preferred, ambiguous conclusion.

Having meted out severe punishment to his childhood self, Mr. Grass slips into the preferred ambiguous mode when recounting his wartime adventures.

Similar(57)

Essentially, two questions are being posed: how explicit should they be about wanting independence; and how do they go about getting it?Plaid Cymru, unlike the Scottish Nationalists, has never claimed to seek full independence for Wales, preferring ambiguous phrases like "self-government" to express its goals.

Thomas Cook's annoucement doesn't even answer that question clearly, preferring the ambiguous "stepping down".

Mac prefers the ambiguous gender pronoun judy," which is, Mac says, "it's own performance art piece and it's own fun", but when dressed down he presents as male.

This complexity measure correlates nicely with a number of well-attested processing issues, such as the difficulty of center embedding, garden path effects, attachment preferences, and preferred scope construals in ambiguous constructions.

Now it is III that is ambiguous, while IV is unambiguous but risky, and thus IV might seem better to you if you preferred risky to ambiguous prospects.

All of this was understood by Indonesia's "foreign friends", who also knew how to bring the terror to an end, but preferred evasive and ambiguous reactions that the Indonesian generals could easily interpret as a "green light" to carry out their work.

The term "transformed migraine" is to be preferred, because it is less ambiguous and more indicative of the type of patients we are referring to [12, 13, 39 41].

Such a description is much preferred over the use of ambiguous terminology such as "single blind" or "double blind".

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