Use "at odds" in a sentence

1. She is at odds with her boss.

2. The two traits are not at odds.

3. Her description is at odds with Tiller's.

4. They're constantly at odds with each other.

5. He was at odds with his Prime Minister.

6. Briggs found himself at odds with his colleagues.

7. Synonym: at odds, conflicting, confounding, mutually exclusive, self-Contradictory

8. He's always at odds with his father over politics.

9. They're at odds over the funding of the project.

10. Here, however, perception is often at odds with reality.

11. Say you made your wager at odds of 40-

12. The interests of scholarship and pedagogy are at odds here.

13. Mark's account of what happened is at odds with Dan's.

14. At odds of 10-1 he bet a hundred pounds.

15. This attitude has put them at odds with some other groups.

16. But too often we find ourselves at odds with each other.

17. The two politicians were at odds over what was the truth.

18. And these goals aren't necessarily diametrically opposed, but they are at odds.

19. The profit motive is inherently at odds with principles of fairness and equity.

20. Guan Yu head's to me to get me at odds with Liu Bei

21. Enduring success was at odds with all history and could not be expected.

22. The two illustrations —a caring shepherd and a generous host— are not at odds.

23. The two sides are still at odds over a pay increase for airline pilots.

24. Backbiting is from Shaytaan (Satan) Shaytaan wants us as Muslims to be at odds

25. Characters who maintain a more accepted lifestyle are frequently at odds with the protagonists.

26. Living at such close quarters with them, Anne found herself at odds with the princesses.

27. An adviser said there was no reason why the two countries should remain at odds.

28. These findings are at odds with what is going on in the rest of the country.

29. This aversion to social values may seem at odds with the explosion of community service programs.

30. She enjoys riding her bicycle and appears to be at odds with Makise for some reason.

31. They radiated a fierce interest in their work which was at odds with their taciturn manner.

32. While my first injury had been an occasion of oneness, the second put us at odds.

33. I believe that concept is absolutely at odds with the spirit of the common fisheries policy.

34. Contradictory: adjective abjuratory, absonant, adverse , antagonistic , antithetical , asserting the contrary , asserting the opposite , at odds , at variance

35. Square-cut and staid to behold, it packs a potent punch quite at odds with its looks.

36. Their pleasure was tempered with concern that the policy change was at odds with what they requested.

37. She gave him a sweet smile, totally at odds with the look of dislike in her eyes.

38. Clearly, then, the Bible is at odds with the pagan notion that man possesses an immortal soul.

39. Antonyms for Consentient include divided, split, partite, disunited, apart, asunder, fragmented, factionalized, at odds and in conflict

40. It's possible to be Bedfellows with someone on one issue, and at odds with them on another

41. Biweekly and Bimonthly each have a pair of meanings that are unhelpfully at odds with one another

42. David disliked this trait of Harriet's, a fatalism that seemed so at odds with the rest of her.

43. Any other unilateral actions that are being taken in this particular case are at odds with international law.

44. Indeed, some of the individuals cited above would unquestionably find themselves at odds with certain of our conclusions.

45. The pacifistic peasants, who seek some basic rights, are at odds with local authorities and later, the army.

46. For one thing, the Fed’s decision appears to be at odds with signs that US inflation is accelerating.

47. Indeed, the logic of commercialism may lead the enterprise to pursue activities at odds with other government objectives.

48. He had a shy, retiring side to his personality that was completely at odds with his public persona.

49. One of the common stereotypes of Adolescence is the rebellious, wild teen continually at odds with mom and dad

50. First, the political demands on public enterprises lead to objectives that are confusing, changeable and often mutually at odds.

51. What should we do when confronted with claims which are conspicuously at odds with the general run of experience?

52. Some hand Bloodstains traced angles at odds with each other as well, off by as much as 10 degrees

53. In this way, individual operations can be shaped to be realistic rather than at odds with the likely outcome.

54. 11 Crucially, though, you can see intuitively that totipotency and differentiation seem to be at odds with each other.

55. However, it is the fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible —not the Bible itself— that is at odds with science.

56. Improvisation is at odds with the legitimate caution in managerial concerns over decision making, strategy organization design, and compliance.

57. 6 David disliked this trait of Harriet's,(www.Sentencedict.com) a fatalism that seemed so at odds with the rest of her.

58. The leaders of Christendom are blinded by their devotion to traditions and doctrines that are at odds with the Scriptures.

59. Poor leadership might also lead to conflict, with the goals of individuals or groups diverging and at odds with each other.

60. A passionate Archeologian and fervent believer in the imperial truth, Conan is always at odds with the rest of the party

61. This more sophisticated view of literary production is clearly at odds with the vulgar Marxist criticism of Zhdanov, Radek and Stetsky.

62. Accordingly, accepting Bible truth comes at a price: It may put you at odds with friends, neighbors, workmates, and even your family.

63. Personal Animosities run very deep in the Middle East and sometimes areoctagonal (at odds) to strategic interests and pull in opposite directions

64. 30 There are laughs to be had in putting James at odds with his own Americanness, and indeed his own prototypical modernity.

65. “Although,” similar to “despite” and “in spite of,” is a way explaining a contrast, which is when two things are at odds

66. The organization that compulsively seeks to minimize the costs of its actions is for ever at odds with the reality of its performance.

67. This places her at odds with the SSS as her responsibilities require her to suppress delinquency and other disruptive activities that the team does.

68. This approach, he says without rancour, has put him at odds with conventional Joyce scholars: "No one hates a populariser more than an intellectual."

69. Even the epigraph to The Line of Beauty - a passage from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - suggests a playfulness at odds with his ascetic reputation.

70. For the coin toss, Bookmakers would offer heads or tails at odds below 2.0, meaning you would have to bet more to win £10

71. The Bliss children, Simon and Sorel – Bickeringly at odds in the well-delineated performances of Sam Alexander and Laura Rogers – have invited, respectively, a …

72. Skeeter is a Bluestocking, having developed liberal notions and journalistic aspirations at college that put her at odds with her old friends Hilly and Elizabeth

73. In Colony, Sarah Wayne Callies stars as Katie – a woman who’s had to make difficult choices that have put her at odds with those she loves most

74. Aquarian energies are already entering into all aspects of human affairs and the old ways that are seemingly at odds with the new, friendly ideals will soon collapse

75. At Odds Shark (and many other sites where we gather Consensus votes and expert picks), thousands of expert opinions and NBA wagering predictions are offered on every game.

76. A significant portion of Black males are “Contrarians” that take positions at odds with the general Black political consensus – while Black women tend to take the communal approach

77. This included an end to traditionally sanctioned rites of pilgrimage, recognized by the orthodox schools of jurisprudence, but at odds with those sanctioned by Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab.

78. The definition of Contradictory is things that cannot both be true, or that are at odds with each other so that if one is correct, the other is not

79. Before the vote, GOP leadership complained that neither bill addressed the current crisis at the border, putting Republicans inclined to support one or both at odds with their party’s Broader

80. Despite its non-committal language, however, the 45-page report still paints a picture of a country whose military build-up appears worryingly at odds with its stated peaceful intentions.