English to Punjabi Dictionary dissent

dissent

ਅਸਹਿਮਤੀ
definition
verb
two members dissented from the majority
hold or express opinions that are at variance with those previously, commonly, or officially expressed.
noun
there was no dissent from this view
the expression or holding of opinions at variance with those previously, commonly, or officially held.
example
The move caused widespread discontent in the Conservative Party and open 'dissent' from leading modernisers.
he was sent off for 'dissent'
It called for a new crackdown on doctrinal 'dissent' , and recommended a papal investigation of American seminaries, the subtext of which was to blame gays.
Fair enough, but why did we hear so little 'dissent' from within the movement?
People can disagree, differ and 'dissent' , even within the ruling party, without this negatively affecting the stability of our country and the peace that we continue to enjoy.
To march is a symbolic act not only of 'dissent' from the government's position but to remind everyone that a people is not - and can never be - the same as a regime.
When a state's appropriation imparts too generous a benefit to religion alone, the establishment clause should provide a pathway to 'dissent' .
The policy has apparently generated little 'dissent' from within the Scouts.
The Inquisition's actions would be excessive today because we have the leisure to tolerate 'dissent' with no threat to our survival - not as yet, at any rate.
Yet the organisation, with no 'dissent' from the Executive or the Crown Office, continues to stand by its discredited experts.
He pointed out that it was easy to exaggerate the importance of Australian expressions of 'dissent' from Allied plans, and Curtin's messages.
But in a move seen as an attempt to quell this 'dissent' from the back benches, Mr Cullen announced the abolition of plans for the direct election of mayors.
But this is exactly the model that China has chosen to take - with little in the way of 'dissent' from the ‘international community’.
No thesis of theology escapes criticism, and no edict is exempt from conscientious 'dissent' .
He can be unpredictable and even manage to 'dissent' from established opinion, if only on the margin.
A state religious court evaluating nonconformity or 'dissent' deserves whatever answers it receives.
One perspective reflected a background of English / Welsh 'dissent' and the other a Scots / Irish covenanter tradition.
I have continually argued for France's right to express its 'dissent' from the opinion of the international community.
It is at delicate moments in world affairs, such as this, that expressions of widespread 'dissent' from opinion-formers can become a real political force.
For all liberals, the stumbling block in Newman's work is his consistently held conviction that the act of faith allows no room at all for 'dissent' or doubt.
Historians sometimes make the mistake of thinking that early modern religious 'dissent' argues secularization.
This is the first sign of an Opposition shaping up to reflect current 'dissent' from so many of current government policies.
Their readings have roots in and derive their stimulus from historical and political schema of 'dissent' outlined in the biblical narratives.
Church, democracy and 'dissent' : Paul Rule reviews two books by Paul Collins.
Or in the face of 'dissent' when his party had lost their way and run short of food the avid Bible student resorted to his Scriptures.
These words provoked no murmurs of 'dissent' from this largely Republican crowd.
That kind of perspective teaches me the need to respect 'dissent' , nonconformity, and liberty of conscience as priority Baptist values.
He has just about put the lid on 'dissent' from within the Cabinet.
Brown wrote the Committee for the Nation expressing his 'dissent' from the President's gold purchasing program in late 1933.
One is composed of intellectuals, people who preach 'dissent' from the values of the ‘core culture.’
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