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I want to convey the idea that truth can mean one thing to one person and another thing to someone else.

Does this do the job? --> Truth is a subjective term.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/subjective

Or is subjective not the right word?

http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/subjective

This word's meaning seems all over the place and hard to nail down.

Thanks. I love you all!

2007-02-07 13:04:14 · 9 answers · asked by John16 5 in Education & Reference Homework Help

9 answers

Subjective is the *perfect* word for your sentence :)

2007-02-07 13:07:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

"Push" - To give a Lower Card or Mid Card Performer a Boost into the Next Level (Low - Mid , Mid - Main Event) of the Business because they are seemingly Well liked & "Over" with the Fans. Also done because the Performer sells a lot of Merchandise & makes the Promoter $$$. The Opposite of this would be known as a "Bury" or "Being Buried". Push example - WrestleMania 21. John Cena & Batista both got Respective "Pushes" into the Main Event by Winning the WWE & WHC Respectively. Bury example - MVP had been "Buried" in the Last 6 Months in a 20+ Match Losing Streak Storyline for Backstage "Heat" he Acquired from other Superstars. BQ - "Put Over" - To make another Performer look Good while you Yourself Lose to them or "Do the Job". Also , a Match can be "Put Over" as well as both Competitors all at the Same Time. Put Over example - John cena put Over 3 Different People at 3 Consecutive PPV's: Vengeance NOC - Triple H GAB - JBL Summerslam - Batista Cena Lost Cleanly in all 3 Matches. Put Over a Match example - Hell in a Cell , Badd Blood 1997 , HBK vs. The Undertaker. This was the First HiaC Match , People did not know what to expect , But Throughout the Match & After , The HiaC became Very Popular with the Fans. HBK & Undertaker Put the HiaC Match "Over" , while Putting Each other "Over" at the Same Time.

2016-05-24 05:04:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, you could use "Truth is a subjective term" or simply, "The truth is subjective." You're using the word correctly either way. You also possibly could use relative such as, "The truth is relative." Hope this helps!

2007-02-07 13:17:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would say that subjective would work, but "relative" is the best word to you. For each person, truth is relative. It means that person perceives truth through their own set of experiences.
Good luck.

2007-02-07 13:16:04 · answer #4 · answered by English answers 1 · 1 0

You got it right. Hope it gets you a high grade.

2007-02-07 13:08:27 · answer #5 · answered by swamp elf 5 · 1 0

yes, subjective would work in this case.

2007-02-07 13:08:24 · answer #6 · answered by Linkin 7 · 1 0

you can also simplify to Truth is relative

2007-02-07 13:11:56 · answer #7 · answered by sm bn 6 · 1 0

yep. that works real good.

2007-02-07 13:12:02 · answer #8 · answered by kelsey 3 · 1 0

pretty good yeah

2007-02-07 13:08:25 · answer #9 · answered by mikey_love_13 1 · 1 0

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