Intention in a sentence as a noun

As someone who doesn't use and has no intention of ever using OS X or iOS, this is great news for me!

I highly doubt that the company doesn't want to hire women or has any sexist intention.

If your intention is to jump over to the business side relatively soon, that advice would change.

Your boss already has every intention to manage you out as soon as he drops the counteroffer on the table.

Their whole intention was for me to retrieve information from those databases that were located in foreign countries.

"and the Guardian walked the claim back"No they didn't."The Guardian has not revised any of our articles and, to my knowledge, has no intention to do so.

But that's after intentions changed -- a broken port to new tech with the intention to fix it, then that changed, and thus it got dropped under the guise of "Remove dead code"me: fair enough.

They cherry picked quotes, out of context and attempted to create confusion in any readers, with the intention of misleading them as to the judges present ruling.

They've always stated their intention is to create "lulz" and just do whatever damage they can, apparently people overlooked this when they were attacking people everyone "hated".

I am aware of internal mechanisms for discussing labor issues with Google, and had no intention of defaming the company..."A lot of times you can dig a hole for yourself that wasn't there by trying to explain things.

If you haven't got time to read the whole thing, consider these sentences:In fact the FBI agents even admitted their intention to collect passwords in transit so they could access emails protected by Lavabits encrypted storage feature.

Or is there some amount of crossover between inventing the future and merely playing around?Instead the top comment is the forum analogue of a fluff post: a cynical dismissal based on some presumed bad intention on the writer's part.

In almost every case but that extreme one, though, it is pretty hard to prove that a promoter never had any intention of making some good-faith effort to do the development, even if the promoter is flaky or uses bad business judgment in how funds are spent.

If the US is nowhere near being an authoritarian police state, at what point will US become a authoritarian police state?When they have **** lists without any trial, jury or judge?When they keep prisoners in jail indefinitely without a trial?When they torture prisoners?When state officials lie to the public?When state officials lie to public representatives?When the secret police interfere with lawyers communications and interferes with legal cases?When the secret police silence individuals that want to inform about abuse?When the secret police use surveillance for blackmailing?When the state use strip searches and surveillance indiscriminately against the population, including children?When the state implement state censorship?When they use force against peaceful demonstrators?When they utilize military resources against peaceful demonstrators?When they seize bank assets without any trial, any intention of a trial, or even without ever formally serving the individual with criminal papers?Please state what criteria we should use, so we can have a final definition of what an authoritarian police state is.

Intention definitions

noun

an anticipated outcome that is intended or that guides your planned actions; "his intent was to provide a new translation"; "good intentions are not enough"; "it was created with the conscious aim of answering immediate needs"; "he made no secret of his designs"

See also: purpose intent design

noun

(usually plural) the goal with respect to a marriage proposal; "his intentions are entirely honorable"

noun

an act of intending; a volition that you intend to carry out; "my intention changed once I saw her"