polarise造句1. The trend to polarise in reading theory and practice is both unnecessary and unfortunate.
2. The current architectural debate has served to polarise popular opinion on modern architecture.
3. The Schism, we may say, tragically helped to polarise increasingly strong nationalist attitudes towards the war.
4. Debate tended to polarise - New Right and old Left.
5. The ceramic's crystals polarise in one of two alternate states when energised by an electric field.
6. The president's left-of-centre programme threatens to polarise Congress.
7. If things polarise into a huge power struggle, swamps will become vampires, turning every little thing into an issue about themselves.
8. The green debate tends to polarise into science-as-saviour versus science-as-devil camps.
9. As a result, Uzzell reckons that the market is likely to polarise over the next few years.
10. There are two major themes to be drawn out in this discussion which polarise it to some extent at opposite points.
11. In part that is because open-source software tends to polarise opinion.
12. As Peter Saville explains, it needed to be someone who wouldn't " polarise opinion. "
13. RW: But the irony is that books like yours and [Richard Dawkins's] God Delusion balkanise the world a good deal more, because they polarise views.
14. Events behind the barbed wire at Fort Bragg continue to polarise opinion.
15. E pluribus unum? All these conflicting interests are helping to polarise further America's politics.