Objection in a sentence as a noun

"Yeah, we anticipated the "We don't fund patent trolls" objection.

I would have no objection if Google banned him, then he appealed, explaining the situation, and they reinstated him.

If they mean that the team that they formed was 30% better on the predictions used to grant entrance into the team, then your objection still holds.

I am by no means saying this objection should **** the idea, you gotta break a few eggs, and if I happen to be one of them, so be it.

As the Apple person in question, my primary objection isn't about whether I "want it standardized yet".

Can I phrase the same objection in a more HN-y manner?SSH terminals are high-sensitivity software.

I have practical and philosophical objections to their process, and perhaps 20% of the time when I opt out, I'm treated like human garbage [4].

But, most people don't have any weirdo academic objections, so they go through the regular process and everything is fine, 99% of the time.

Noting your statements that this is just everyday conversational usage, I stand by my objection to that fallacious manner of speaking.

As every legal objection so far has been struck down, and the streams are authorized by the Aereo user, it seems like disingenuous reporting to call the streams 'unauthorized'.

"I'm seeing this objection a lot lately, and perhaps I'm showing my age here, but I've certainly got an "expectation of being largely individually anonymous when in public".

It's strange to have some moral objection to advertising because advertising is, ultimately, a form of discovery, a way of connecting people who want or need something with those that supply it.

Otherwise....I think we hackers are going to be driven to Linux on the desktop over time, which I would have no objection to if only there were an "Apple for Linux" company making the hardware and matching drivers of Apple-level quality.

Concerning the broader claims on which the jury hung, it still faces a potent objection from Google that it cannot assert copyright violations based on the 37 API packages owing to defects in how the Java program was registered with the copyright office.

[2] In the UK this is a semi-democratic consultation process which occurs at local government level and involves publicly presenting the designs to local councillors to give residents of the area a chance to raise a formal objection.

He already knew all of this, every bit of what we're experiencing, and our objection to his ideas is nothing more than an ideological almost religious belief that the most effective way to motivate individuals is to rank, rate, measure, and reward them accordingly.

When the argument is that C++ has too many features that interact in unpredictable ways and are virtually impossible to get right, arguing that C++ is superior because it has more features is perhaps a fine argument in some hypothetical universe in which the primary objection to C++ is that it is missing features, but by failing to grapple with the points raised by the opposition in the real universe, you will fail to convince anybody.

Objection definitions

noun

the act of expressing earnest opposition or protest

See also: expostulation remonstrance remonstration

noun

the speech act of objecting

noun

the act of protesting; a public (often organized) manifestation of dissent

See also: protest dissent

noun

(law) a procedure whereby a party to a suit says that a particular line of questioning or a particular witness or a piece of evidence or other matter is improper and should not be continued and asks the court to rule on its impropriety or illegality