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Adjectives commonly used to describe "opinion" — vivid descriptors for richer, more specific prose.
(adj)
Able to be known or seen by everyone; happening without concealment; open to general view.
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Including or involving every part or member of a given or implied entity, whole, etc.; common to all, universal.
Of a person or an animal:
Liked by many people; generally pleasing, widely admired.
Physically elevated, extending above a base or average level:
(n)
A citizen or national of the United States of America.
Of or pertaining to a particular person; relating to, or affecting, an individual, or each of many individuals
A person with extensive knowledge or ability in a given subject.
Occurring or happening regularly or frequently; usual.
Existing or occurring at the moment.
Situated close to, or even below, the ground or another normal reference plane; not high or lofty.
Opposite; in an opposite direction; in opposition; adverse.
The citizens or inhabitants of the United Kingdom.
Having a low opinion of oneself; not proud, arrogant, or assuming; modest.
Belonging or pertaining to an individual person, group of people, or entity that is not the state.
Of or pertaining to the practice of medicine.
Relating to the law or to lawyers.
Sharing the same views or opinions, and being in harmony or accord.
With no or few possessions or money, particularly in relation to contemporaries who do have them.
Expressing or indicating favour or goodwill; approving, encouraging.
A person who belongs to a profession.
US standard spelling of favourable. [Apt to win favour; pleasing.]
Greater or lesser (whichever is seen as more advantageous), in reference to value, distance, time, etc.
Able to give advice.
Extremely important.
Instructed; having knowledge of a fact or area of education.
Located directly across from something else, or from each other.
Just, only; no more than, pure and simple, neither more nor better than might be expected.
(of a person or institution) Scrupulous with regard to telling the truth; not given to swindling, lying, or fraud; upright.
Modern, of the present age (shorthand for ‘contemporary with the present’).
Of or relating to India or its people; or (formerly) of the East Indies.
Free from any doubt.
Approved by authority; authorized.
Widely open to new ideas, willing to depart from established opinions or conventions; permissive.
Untrue, not factual, factually incorrect.
Of or relating to the administration of justice.
Relating to or being the second of two items.
Educated or informed.
Common to all members of a group or class.
Generally accepted as correct or true.
Widespread or preferred.
Containing an error; inaccurate.
Free from error; true; accurate.
(politics) One who seeks to promote or preserve traditional values or institutions.
(UK, business) A business partnership; the name under which it trades.
(physical) Matter, material.
Characteristic of a scholar.
Affecting, or found throughout, a large area (e.g. the entire land or body); broad in extent; widely diffused.
Straightforward, open and sincere.
Having been carefully thought out; maturely reflected upon.
Likely or most likely to be true.
(N)
"Held" is a song by Smog, released as his first single from his 1999 album Knock Knock.
Done on purpose; intentional.
US standard spelling of unfavourable. [Serving to hinder or oppose; adverse, disadvantageous, inconducive, unsuitable.]
Of high or especially quick cognitive capacity, bright.
Serving to hinder or oppose; adverse, disadvantageous, inconducive, unsuitable.