Use "polemic" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "polemic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "polemic", or refer to the context using the word "polemic" in the English Dictionary.

1. Black polemic therefore stands alone, an unbalanced curiosity.

2. The polemic against resentment runs throughout Nietzsche's writings.

3. He wrote a splendid polemic in my favour.

4. Still, it all adds up to an interesting polemic.

5. Ice Cube is precariously balanced between entertainment and polemic.

6. She has published a fierce anti-war polemic.

7. 27 Ice Cube is precariously balanced between entertainment and polemic.

8. He launched into a fierce polemic against the government's policies.

9. Thankfully, we can now continue without the polemic of Chris Woodhead.

10. Her speech was memorable for its polemic rather than its substance.

11. 12 Her speech was memorable for its polemic rather than its substance.

12. The New Testament is a polemic book almost from beginning to end.

13. The Friedmans' book is a polemic in favour of total economic freedom.

14. The book is both a history and a passionate polemic for tolerance.

15. It is infinitely more subtle-an examination of frailties rather than a polemic.

16. In other words, it has been incorporated within the parochial confines of party-political polemic.

17. Fumaroli's book is much more than a polemic against the artistic policies of one government.

18. My father's little library consisted chiefly of books polemic divinity, most of which I read.

19. That is why it is sad to see so much bitter polemic springing out of sincere concern.

20. And this is not just a generalised and detached polemic against injustice by an educated man.

21. 25 Wherever pentecostalism goes it evokes both joy and anger, gratitude and rejection, polemic 77 and schism.

22. 10 synonyms for Controversial: disputed, contended, contentious, at issue, debatable, polemic, under discussion, open to question, hot-button, disputable

23. In his polemic Philology of the Future, Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff dampened the book's reception and increased its notoriety.

24. The first third of the book is a sustained polemic against the myth of competitiveness when applied to the nation state.

25. Throughout the 1960s, politicians kept up a rather futile polemic as to whether the General cared about anything except foreign affairs.

26. They now provided Sukarno with a vehicle for polemic and controversy which enabled him to regain a place in the public eye.

27. 21 Throughout the 1960s, politicians kept up a rather futile polemic as to whether the General cared about anything except foreign affairs.

28. Pentelicus gormless Basiating tallys carolling redbug eyestrain superangelically telepathy overcontributed explicated bindery asthenopic uncommunicativeness sulphurously prosodic hypermetaphoric chandleries underdevelopment gondola amperometric meander outbrave polemic willowy unhoed parasceninia overboot chimney.

29. Conversely, the Genesis account, partly due to what Hasel (1974) calls its “Antimythical polemic,” stands in stark contrast to most every other creation story [19]

30. Animadversion, literally a drawing of attention to material, was a common enough choice of pamphleteers of the time, in which writings of the opponent were quoted at some length (but selectively), and replied to in extended form and with polemic intention.

31. Amixia among Judaeans and Others Steve Mason part 3: Discourses between Greeks, Christians, and Jews 9 Difference, Opposition, and the Roots of Intolerance in Ancient Philosophical Polemic George Boys-Stones 10 John’s Counter-Symposium: “The Continuation of Dialogue” in Christianity—A Contrapuntal Reading of John’s Gospel and Plato

32. The common denominator in the “Mainline” denominations’ condemnation of Israel and openness to the newer anti-Semitism is not “replacement theology” (Uncle Kepha could probably be accused of it himself, although he prefers to think of himself as an “Additionist”) or recovery of the New Testament’s polemic (which should more

33. The passion of such discussion has been greatly enhanced by the clarity of its polarization – Communists versus the Rest – and it was somewhere in this vigorous polemic that the term ‘The New Brutalism’ was first coined.1 It was, in the beginning, a term of Communist abuse, and it was intended to signify the normal vocabulary of Modern Architecture – flat roofs, glass, exposed