The opposing teams shook hands before the game.
We are opposing your policies.
"Both parties had to agree to give up something in order to appease the opposing person."
(Dissentient is an adjective meaning dissenting, and can be used as a noun meaning a dissentient person, more commonly known as a dissenter. The noun form is dissentience, meaning disapproval.)There were many dissentients in the legislature who opposed the abortion law.
This sentence is a declarative sentence as it makes a statement.
A de novo sentence is a sentence imposed by a court without considering any prior sentence or recommendation. It is usually given when a previous sentence is determined to be invalid or improper, requiring a new sentence to be issued.
Oh really! That is a declaratory sentence. A declaratory sentence does not need to be long.
We went out to battle the opposing army.
The two opposing forces in a book are the protagonist and the antagonist.
A third party was assigned to adjudicate the opposing claims.
The underlined phrase "to tolerate opposing views" is an infinitive phrase. It functions as the complement of the verb "means" in the sentence.
The pronoun is he, a word that takes the place of a noun for a male person and the subject of the sentence.
The news will devastate her. That score should devastate the opposing team.
A counterpart is an opposite number, or an equivalent. She was his counterpart on the opposing team.
Late in the game the defense finally discovered a chink in the opposing quarterbacks armor.
I am using the word sortie in a sentence right now, but... You can use sortie as a verb or a noun: The general wanted us to sortie the opposing army.
The committee members treated each other with civility, even though they represented opposing interests
The opposite of "although" is typically "however" or "but". These words are used to introduce contrasting or opposing information in a sentence.
The football team executed the play so awfully that the opposing team scored a touchdown.