what is your preference? my Preference does not matter at all!
I have a preference for the color yellow. Her preference toward the candidate was obvious.
"I have a preference for pizza". By the way, if you are trying to learn good English you should realise that a question is not necessarily a question just because you put a question mark at the end. You wrote "Use the word preference in a sentence?" This is not a question. It's a request. In fact, you don't need to ask a question here at all. All you want is to be given an example of a sentence with the word preference in it.
This is a declarative sentence, as it makes a statement about Lisa's lunch preference.
The clerk had to blend two colors for the customer's paint preference.
The canvass of sailors revealed a preference for Dacron over canvas sails.
In a sentence using "like" as a verb, you can say, "I like to read books." This means that you enjoy or have a preference for reading books.
You could easily identify them as devotees of the Goth style of music by the their preference for wearing black clothes.
no
Both "which date" and "what date" are grammatically correct. You can use either one depending on your personal preference or the context of the sentence.
No, the sentence expresses a preference or opinion, not a fact. Facts are objective statements that can be proven, while preferences are subjective and depend on personal feelings or desires.
Respondents do not necessarily need to be capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the beginning of a sentence. It is a matter of style and preference in writing.
a company that was find for its discriminatory practices in the hiring of woman.