sentiment
Usage
What are other ways to say sentiment?
The noun sentiment refers to a mixture of thought and feeling, especially refined or tender feeling: Recollections are often colored by sentiment. Feeling is a general term for a subjective point of view as well as for specific sensations: to be guided by feeling rather than by facts; a feeling of sadness, of rejoicing. Emotion is applied to an intensified feeling: agitated by emotion. Passion is strong or violent emotion, often so powerful that it takes over the mind or judgment: stirred to a passion of anger.
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Declines show how quickly sentiment can shift as money pours into the next hot investment.
“I believe the link is mostly sentiment, not economics as Clawdbot doesn’t directly drive material revenue for NET.”
From Barron's
A similar survey of consumer sentiment rose in January, but it was still at historically depressed levels.
From MarketWatch
An announcement from U.S. rival Micron Technology that it plans to invest around $24 billion in Singapore to meet surging memory-chip demand also boosted market sentiment.
Directionally, the survey diverges from another big independent survey of consumers, published by the University of Michigan, which showed sentiment ticking higher in January as it bounced off near-record lows reached late last year.
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.