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Discover Ludwig'spread opinion' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to the act of disseminating one's beliefs or thoughts. For example: "The media has been accused of spreading biased opinions to the public."
Exact(2)
Yet if anyone seeks the apotheosis of our 140-character culture, an example of how, in these infantilised times, the trivial can seem important, and how social media can, without discrimination or mediation, spread opinion like a forest fire, the summer of Paxman's Beard is definitely it.
There is wide spread opinion, that standards and ethical guidelines regarding electronic communication between a patient and a doctor without personal contact are incomplete.
Similar(58)
Due to the high number of low social status users, they have to be able to intensely communicate among themselves to spread opinions.
The internet gives the public on-demand access to politicians – and a place to discuss them – in an unprecedented way, meaning people can very quickly form and spread opinions based on little more than a leopard print kitten heel.
The most wide-spread opinion based on experimental data is the high degree of MiSat and MaSat sequence conservation exists across the telocentric domain of all mouse chromosomes.
But Mr Adams told BBC Radio Wales: "I think if you spoke to any European Research Group member they would be delighted to think that they were running the party from top to bottom, that's absolute nonsense". Speaking on the Good Morning Wales programme he said: "The prime minister has had to deal with a very broad church, a very spread view of opinions on this particular issue.
In particular, social networks have expanded rapidly in the last few years, playing an increasingly important role in spreading opinions and information in areas as diverse as politics, sport, science, and so on.
"The state agency directly intervened in online forums, systematically spreading opinions on key election issues while pretending to be ordinary citizens".
There was evidence of high stability of responses between Rounds 2 and 3, indicating that, when given three opportunities to consider their opinions, and viewing the spread of opinions across the cohort, participants reported consistent opinions about SDD over time.
In the health care realm, the spread of opinion was similar, at 73 percent to 2 percent.
From the 1930s on, the spread of opinion polls conducted by both commercial and academic practitioners continued at an accelerated pace in the United States.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com