You could plainly state that it is your opinion i/e: In my opinion, I should have something better to do than be setting here answering questions on Wiki Q&A.
In the sentence "Who, in your opinion, will win the class election," the commas are used to set off the interrupter "in your opinion." This interrupts the main clause to provide additional information about the context in which the question is being asked.
This is an opinion I have an opinion My opinion is this
This is a declarative sentence. It is stating a fact or opinion about someone.
I can give you several sentences.It is my opinion that you could write this sentence yourself.She held a low opinion of him.What is your opinion of the painting?
A declarative sentence is a type of sentence that makes a statement or expresses an opinion. It usually ends with a period. A declarative sentence is used to convey information in a straightforward manner.
In the sentence, "In your opinion the president was wrong about that." "that" is a pronoun. Its antecedent is presumably in a preceding sentence.
The oxymoron in the sentence is "unbiased opinion," as an opinion is inherently subjective and cannot truly be unbiased.
The sentence is not punctuated correctly. It would be clearer if it were written as, "In my opinion, this sentence is depressing." Adding a comma after "in my opinion" helps separate the introductory phrase from the main clause.
A sentence that makes a statement
There is no sentence in the question on which to base an opinion.
In my opinion, pets are a nuisance. In my opinion, trees are a good resource. In my opinion, shopping is fun!
Oh really! That is a declaratory sentence. A declaratory sentence does not need to be long.