His work of the 1970s, explored in the next room, gives voice to
an entirely different attitude, of insistent materiality, as opposed to the dematerialised floating wedges and bars of the 1960s.
I read the other day that in Europe there is
an entirely different attitude regarding stains, etc. on marble.
When you are «shopping» you have
an entirely different attitude than when you are in the selling mode.
«He came back from that meet with
an entirely different attitude,» he said.
What we have here are two
entirely different attitudes towards the world: the one concerned with truth and error, the other with what is useful or useless; the one concerned to understand the world and the other concerned to discover how the world works in order to make use of it.
Not exact matches
The Abarth is a
different animal
entirely — a 500 with an
attitude by way of its spirited acceleration, snorting exhaust and athletic handling.
A Strangeness In My Mind brilliantly illuminates the difference between the happiness and contentment — for between these states of mind lies an
entirely different mindset and
attitude toward life that can make or break a man.
In a 1926 book entitled «Travel and Travellers in the Middle Ages,» British scholar Arthur P. Newton asserted that the fabricated marvels of the 14th century travel scribe John de Mandeville were themselves a product of contemporary assumptions and desires: «Marvels such as [his] were the common stock in trade of popular medieval writers on geography, and ridiculous though they may be, they should not
entirely be neglected in attempting to realize something of the
attitude of mind of travelers of the time, half - critical and half credulous, but not wholly
different from that of a later age.»
Child custody evaluations apply — or more accurately, don't apply — principles and constructs from professional psychology in completely haphazard, random, and idiosyncratic ways based on the biases and personal
attitudes of the evaluator, and there is absolutely no inter-rater reliability to the conclusions and recommendations reached by the child custody evaluator, meaning that two
different evaluators can reach
entirely different conclusions and recommendations based on the same data.