How to Use adversarial in a Sentence

adversarial

adjective
  • This gave the researchers a sense of how well the adversarial prompt performed.
    Discover Magazine, 31 July 2023
  • This kind of rhetoric erodes public trust in our adversarial system of justice as well as the trust clients must have in their lawyers.
    Sun Sentinel Editorial Board, Sun Sentinel, 13 Aug. 2024
  • The audience of 1,600-plus, all primed to cheer the speakers’ adversarial views, found less and less to react to as the panel digressed.
    Lorraine Ali, Los Angeles Times, 14 Sep. 2023
  • The primary shift has been the rise of China as an adversarial state.
    Daniel Foster, National Review, 30 Nov. 2023
  • These adversarial twins will have to learn to get over their differences and trust each other in order to save themselves and save the world.
    Joe Otterson, Variety, 3 Dec. 2021
  • Biden has taken a far more adversarial stance than Trump against Putin.
    Washington Post, 10 June 2021
  • That process is adversarial, experts say, even though the water will still stay in Arizona — with Navajos who live there and need it.
    Erin Patrick O'Connor, Washington Post, 14 May 2022
  • But critics say that the city’s adversarial posture is a knee-jerk response to claims of abuse at the hands of city police, one that helps to mask the full extent of official abuse.
    Tom Robbins, The New Yorker, 24 May 2021
  • Then, Kelley left the meeting, and the discussion took a more adversarial tone.
    Robin Goist, cleveland, 4 Oct. 2021
  • But now the two sides have returned to a fully adversarial posture.
    Washington Post, 12 Jan. 2022
  • Though awareness and tools can help mitigate the long-term cost of divorce, the system does not need to be so adversarial, drawn-out, and expensive.
    Rebecca Feinglos, Fortune, 23 Aug. 2023
  • An even more worrisome prospect is that an adversarial hacker could break a military’s LLM and prompt it to spill out its data sets from the back end.
    Gerrit De Vynck, Washington Post, 20 Feb. 2024
  • All need to work from a common set of data and IT practices, and security teams cannot be adversarial or siloed.
    Jim Richberg, Forbes, 25 Aug. 2022
  • The legal profession is unique in that every part of it is adversarial.
    Dallas News, 23 Jan. 2022
  • So began the distrust of sightseers felt by the villagers in the fishing towns, for whom the elements were real and adversarial forces rather than poignant symbols.
    Sam Sacks, WSJ, 18 Nov. 2022
  • Does anyone imagine that the GOP is going to play a role in reassembling a robust, adversarial press in the numerous news deserts that have bloomed across the country?
    Jason Linkins, The New Republic, 28 Jan. 2023
  • Leaders don’t need to see unions as adversarial—and a new class teaches them that organized labor might even be good for business.
    Gabriela Riccardi, Quartz, 2 Feb. 2023
  • But the adversarial nature of the process can be highly productive.
    Amy Davidson Sorkin, The New Yorker, 23 Dec. 2022
  • Bankman-Fried and Zhao both rose to prominence in the cryptocurrency boom and quickly established an adversarial back-and-forth.
    Mia Galuppo, The Hollywood Reporter, 1 Feb. 2023
  • The two trials of Donald Trump served as a reminder that even if an adversarial party controls the House, the Senate controls the outcome of an impeachment.
    Dallas News, 10 Jan. 2023
  • Finally, a fourth approach that some foreign leaders took was to maintain an adversarial posture and dare Trump to make good on his threats.
    Peter D. Feaver, Foreign Affairs, 19 Feb. 2024
  • The Thin Blue Line wasn’t cracked by adversarial interviews.
    Jon Blistein, Rolling Stone, 19 Oct. 2023
  • In the jargon of the CIA, tradecraft is the set of skills spies use to evade adversarial operatives, find new sources and communicate with them securely.
    Arkansas Online, 8 Oct. 2021
  • In the jargon of the CIA, tradecraft is the set of skills spies use to evade adversarial operatives, find new sources, and communicate with them securely.
    BostonGlobe.com, 8 Oct. 2021
  • First, the researchers were able to find adversarial suffixes that can be appended to almost any prompt.
    Harry Guinness, Popular Science, 2 Aug. 2023
  • The White House says its goal is not to thwart adversarial journalism but to manage security risks.
    Paul Farhi, Washington Post, 9 May 2023
  • But, Backman added, a death-penalty trial is ultimately adversarial, and the defense is not required to make the job easy for the prosecution or the judge.
    Rafael Olmeda, Sun Sentinel, 17 Sep. 2022
  • With Mars entering Aries on the 24th, others may become a bit adversarial and bossy but again, something positive will ensue when the planets are in your favor near the 29th.
    Katharine Merlin, Town & Country, 16 May 2022
  • Their relationship has been more adversarial of late, with 50 Cent being a constant commentator as more and more news came out about the Making The Band actor’s harmful treatment of women.
    Armon Sadler, VIBE.com, 1 Aug. 2024
  • Cyber is an adversarial industry, and while regulations may help, bad actors don’t live by regulations and will always have a speed advantage.
    Expert Panel®, Forbes, 24 Sep. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'adversarial.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Last Updated: