What is another word for tendentious?

Pronunciation: [tɛndˈɛnʃəs] (IPA)

Tendentious is an adjective that refers to something that has a clear bias or agenda. Some synonyms for tendentious include partisan, prejudiced, partial, and inclined. Other synonyms could be slanted, skewed, one-sided, or loaded. Tendentious language or ideas can also be described as tendencious, tendentiousness, or tendenciousness. Additionally, tendentious arguments, literature, or media can be characterized as tendential, biased, opinionated, or dogmatic. Such discourse often reflects a particular viewpoint or ideology, and readers or listeners should be aware of its inherent biases. As such, it is essential to be conscious of the language you use when communicating your opinions and ideas.

Synonyms for Tendentious:

What are the paraphrases for Tendentious?

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What are the hypernyms for Tendentious?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for tendentious?

The word tendentious implies a biased or partisan approach to a particular topic or issue. Antonyms for tendentious therefore suggest an objective, impartial, or even-handed approach to the same topic or issue. A few antonyms for tendentious include unbiased, impartial, fair, objective, balanced, even-handed, neutral, dispassionate, and nonpartisan. By using these words in place of tendentious, it is possible to describe a discussion or argument as being conducted in a rational and thoughtful manner, rather than being driven solely by preconceived notions or prejudices. Therefore, the use of antonyms for tendentious can help to create a more open and inclusive conversation.

What are the antonyms for Tendentious?

Famous quotes with Tendentious

  • Hayek had high regard for Marx in technical economic theory and considered him a predecessor in his business cycle theory. [...] It was not in technical economic theory that the classical Austrians disagreed with Marx. So towering a figure in history is Marx that discussion of his thought in summary form is always difficult, for there is so much that he said and that others have said about him. At the same time, so tendentious, ill-spirited, and just plain wrong a thinker was Marx that it is surprising that he may have had some of the influence attributed to him. Hayek’s opposition to Marx was in the realm of practical political emanations from Marx’s thought. Here he considered Marx’s influence to have been wholly pernicious.
    Alan O. Ebenstein
  • The silliest and most tendentious of baseball writing tries to wrest profundity from the spectacle of grown men hitting a ball with a stick by suggesting linkages between the sport and deep issues of morality, parenthood, history, lost innocence, gentleness, and so on, seemingly . (The effort reeks of silliness because baseball is profound all by itself and needs no excuses; people who don't know this are not fans and are therefore unreachable anyway.)
    Stephen Jay Gould
  • Natural historians tend to avoid tendentious preaching in this philosophical mode (although I often fall victim to such temptations in these essays). Our favored style of doubting is empirical: if I wish to question your proposed generality, I will search for a counterexample in flesh and blood. Such counterexamples exist in abundance, for they form a staple in a standard genre of writing in natural history — the “wonderment of oddity” or “strange ways of the beaver” tradition.
    Stephen Jay Gould
  • The trouble with words like "fit" in these discussions is that, if taken in a wide sense they are liable to become vacuous, and if taken more narrowly they easily become tendentious.But if it only means "likely to have many descendants," then there is no reason for treating it as an advantage at all.
    Mary Midgley
  • The reaction against Larkin has been unprecedentedly violent as well as unprecedentedly hypocritical, tendentious and smug. Its energy does not, could not derive from literature — it derives from ideology, or from the vaguer promptings of a new ethos.
    Martin Amis

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