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Many, many products claim to be number one, preferred, best, most loved, most powerful, most popular, etc. The ability of companies to advertise products this way has been tested in courts in the United States and elsewhere. When the statement is a matter of opinion, personal taste, or judgement, a certain amount of hyperbole is accepted. When the statement makes a very specific, verifiable claim about a product ("#1 selling truck four years in a row" or "proven to cure diabetes permanently") that statement must be defensible. Sometimes the statement that a product is number one will have an explanation or limitation presented when the statement is made ("#1 selling fuel efficient car*" might have "*of all American four-door four-cylinder gasoline engine cars in 2008" elsewhere on the page).
claim
Umm im pretty sure that's an opinion
it will be negative if the accepted value is less than the experimental value **********************2nd Opinion************ Don't you have that turned around?
* All arguments; start with an original argument, statement of a personal opinion. * If this first opinion is dissagreed with; there will be a counterargment, expressed personal opinion. * Arguements only happen when the three logical steps of logos: Element; Element; Whole, or absolute, are not practiced. The Art Of Reason.
Fact. A statement that can be proven is based on evidence or objective criteria, making it a fact rather than an opinion. Facts are verifiable and not influenced by personal beliefs or feelings.
"The movie was incredibly boring and poorly made." This statement reflects the author's subjective viewpoint and can be considered an opinion rather than a verifiable fact.
A fact is a statement that can be proven true or false based on evidence, while an opinion is a statement that reflects a person's beliefs, feelings, or thoughts and cannot be proven true or false. Facts are objective and verifiable, while opinions are subjective and based on personal interpretation.
We can state our opinion as well as state the facts. Generally however, a comment is more of a reaction, an opinion or off-the-cuff remark; a statement is deliberate and often even prepared in advance.
It depends on whether the statement is subjective (opinion) or factual (verifiable). If a majority voices the same opinion (e.g. abortion is wrong), it doesn't necessarily make it true - or false. If the same people say the earth is flat however, that is not true.
A statement based on feelings, judgments, or predictions is subjective in nature, reflecting an individual's personal viewpoint rather than verifiable facts. It can be influenced by personal experiences, biases, or emotions, making it open to interpretation and varying from person to person.
modified opinion
A declaration is a formal statement of opinion.
That is an opinion and cannot be answered with a fact. However, they are both generally accepted to be good-looking.
A statement which has an opposite opinion to a theory
This statement can be considered a mix of fact and opinion. It is a fact that education is recognized as a universal right for children by various international conventions and agreements. However, the idea that children are entitled to education is subjective and not universally accepted by all individuals or societies.
This quote expresses an opinion, as it is a metaphorical statement about how mobs can behave irrationally due to lack of individual critical thinking. It is not a verifiable fact but a reflection of the speaker's perspective on mob mentality.