Disagreed Sentence Examples

disagreed
  • Why did he do that every time he disagreed with her?

    54
    30
  • In a book issued in 1921 in justification of his own actions, Mr. Lansing explained that he disagreed with Mr. Wilson on various points, including that of incorporation of the League of Nations in the Peace Treaty; but he was overtly responsible with him for signing the Treaty, and on his return to Washington he urged that the Treaty as formulated be adopted by the Senate.

    38
    22
  • Still, it wasn't the first time they had vehemently disagreed on something.

    39
    26
  • On this question the brothers disagreed.

    18
    9
  • The four of us unanimously disagreed.

    6
    5
  • In this, and in some matters of home politics, the king disagreed with his ministers.

    20
    20
  • On the 25th of January 1881 the jury disagreed, and Parnell became stronger than ever.

    5
    6
  • The soma disagreed with Indra; part of it which was not drunk up became Vrittra the serpent, Indra's ' Hibbert Lectures, p. 230.

    6
    7
  • Carmen had her moments, but for the most part, she stood behind him - even when she disagreed.

    1
    2
  • She disagreed, and bade au revoir to her favorite mosaic, the " unswept floor " in the Vatican.

    1
    2
    Advertisement
  • Only two unions disagreed, with one of them even suggesting a triennial congress.

    1
    2
  • The judges disagreed, and the final decision, afterwards known as the Keate award, was given by the referee on the 17th of October 1871.

    1
    2
  • Jay and Adams disagreed with him on this point, believing that France intended to curtail the territorial aspirations of the Americans for her own benefit and for that of her ally, Spain.

    2
    3
  • Dearest, I'm afraid this morning's fruschtique *--as Foka the cook calls it--has disagreed with me.

    2
    2
  • Stanton disagreed with Johnson 's plans to readmit the seceded states to the Union without guarantees of civil rights for freed slaves.

    2
    2
    Advertisement
  • He decided to remain anonymous out of fear of retribution from those who disagreed with his point of view.

    2
    2
  • Once Haim moved in with the newlyweds, it soon became a case of The Odd Couple as the two disagreed and butted heads.

    2
    2
  • As of 2004, researchers disagreed as to whether it is learned behavior, the result of biochemical or neurological abnormalities, or a combination of factors.

    1
    2
  • It's difficult to believe that in the beginning, there were a number of executives who strongly disagreed with Depp's portrayal.

    1
    2
  • She kept fans watching the show, even if they disagreed with the subject matter, by not revealing what the ultimate result of the storyline would be.

    1
    2
    Advertisement
  • When Deb found herself in a way station to heaven, she disagreed with her angel Fred's assessment of her utter lack of substance (she'd done nothing bad or good throughout her life).

    1
    2
  • The management at the insurance company disagreed and Mecherle set out to start his own company.

    1
    2
  • Most significantly, whenever the various rating firms disagreed on "vulnerable" classification for an insurer, Weiss typically went with "vulnerable."

    1
    2
  • Critics gave the show a lukewarm response, with one reviewer likening it to "eating diet rice cakes," but the viewing audience disagreed and turned My Fair Wedding into a top rated show for WE.

    2
    2
  • They disagreed, and sometimes they even spent a few days not talking to each other, but they always worked things out.

    6
    8
    Advertisement
  • Mason was a near neighbour and a lifelong friend of George Washington, though in later years they disagreed in politics.

    7
    9
  • He was crowned on Christmas Day, I ioo, by the patriarch himself; but the struggle of church and state was not yet over, and in the spring of IIoi Baldwin had Dagobert suspended by a papal legate, while later in the year the two disagreed on the question of the contribution to be made by the patriarch towards the defence of the Holy Land.

    5
    7
  • His son Piero said that he took medicine on the 10th of June which disagreed with him; and on the 22nd he died, having received the last offices of the Church.

    5
    7
  • Formerly, where no oversman was named in the submission, and no power given to the arbiters to name one, the proceedings were abortive if the arbiters disagreed, unless the parties consented to a nomination.

    6
    8
  • But with the written dialogues of Plato he always continued to agree almost as much as he disagreed.

    0
    2
  • Both sides felt that reform was again necessary, but the Catholic majority disagreed among themselves as to the form it should take.

    5
    7
  • This independence caused great wrath at St Petersburg, where Bernstorff was accused of disloyalty, and ultimately sacrificed to the resentment of the Russian government (13th of November 1780), the more readily as he already disagreed on many important points of domestic administration with the prime minister Haegh Guldberg.

    5
    7
  • They resorted to the help of the government in order to stamp out the opinions with which they disagreed, and the claims of the artisans to practical equality were rejected by them, as in earlier days the claims of the middle class had been by the nobles.

    5
    7
  • It was an open secret that in some instances they disagreed with the policy they were called upon to enforce.

    4
    6
  • In 1812, however, he was obliged, after Wellington's great victory of Salamanca, to evacuate Andalusia, and was soon after recalled from Spain at the request of Joseph Bonaparte, with whom, as with the other marshals, he had always disagreed.

    0
    2
  • Timothy Dwight (1752-1847) urged the use of the means of grace, thought Hopkins and Emmons pantheistic, and boldly disagreed with their theory of " exercises," reckoning virtue and sin as the result of moral choice or disposition, a position that was also upheld by Asa Burton (1752-1836), who thought that on regeneration the disposition of man got a new relish or " taste."

    5
    7
  • Taylor's theology was distinctively infra-lapsarian; it disagreed with Samuel Hopkins and Emmons in rejecting the theory of "divine efficiency" and in arguing that man can choose the right "even if he won't" - distinguishing like Edwards between natural ability and moral inability; it distinguished sensibility or susceptibility as something different from will or understanding, without moral qualities, to which the appeal for right choice may be made; and it made selflove (a term borrowed from Dugald Stewart, connoting the innocent love of happiness and distinct from selfishness) the particular feeling appealed to by the influences of the law and gospel.

    1
    3
  • It was inevitable that, in proportion as this casuistry assumed the character of a systematic penal jurisprudence, its precise determination of the limits between the prohibited and the allowable, with all doubtful points closely scrutinized and illustrated by fictitious cases, would have a tendency to weaken the moral sensibilities of ordinary minds; the greater the industry spent in deducing conclusions from the diverse authorities, the greater necessarily became the number of points on which doctors disagreed; and the central authority that might have repressed serious divergences was wanting in the period of moral weakness'- that the church went through after the death of Boniface Viii.

    6
    9
  • There were bound to be times when she disagreed, but she had to have enough faith in him to let him make the decision.

    1
    4
  • I was not reassured by the fact that no-one disagreed with me.

    1
    5
  • On the death of Rohan the French knights disagreed as to the selection of his successor, and a minority were able to elect, in 1797, a German of weak character, Ferdinand Hompesch, as the last Grand Master to rule in Malta.

    4
    10
  • Burke replied in tones of firm self-repression; complained of the attack that had been made upon him; reviewed Fox's charges of inconsistency; enumerated the points on which they had disagreed, and remarked that such disagreements had never broken their friendship. But whatever the risk of enmity, and however bitter the loss of friendship, he would never cease from the warning to flee from the French constitution.

    3
    10