The team's ambivalence for the last few weeks of the season is a result of their many loses up to that point. Ms. James's refusal to give any grade above a C led to wide spread ambivalence among her students during final exam week.
He was not pleased with the decisions of the board, and his ambivalence toward them all was evident.
He was not sure whether he wanted to go, and his ambivalence was obvious as he pondered his decision.
I have the most ambivalence to that subject.
The mother animal who could not carry her newborn baby, watched her group leave the area, looked back at her baby, toward the group, back at the baby: her ambivalence about which choice to make appeared clear in her behaviour.
he demonstrated his ambivalence toward the decision by refusing to speak either for or against.
Surprisingly for Mark, he was experiencing ambivalance towards the win.
Ambivalence Avenue was created on 2009-06-22.
The word "ambivalence" is a noun. It refers to the state of having mixed feelings or contradictory emotions about someone or something.
The origin of ambivalence is from the Latin ambi- 'on both sides' and valere 'be worth'.
Lisa Lewis has written: 'Ambivalence' -- subject(s): Ambivalence
No it's a noun
am-biv-a-lence