0 the quality of expressing or supporting a particular opinion that many people disagree with:
It was also an invitation to tendentiousness in the analysis of international affairs.
The cynic might catch a whiff of tendentiousness in this praise.
Embarked on this task, the wisest and most detached writer in the world would have a hard time avoiding tendentiousness.
A didactic tendentiousness is an occasional weakness in the book.
Much modern secondary literature besides stands convicted of ludicrous credulity and tendentiousness.
Here they run the risk of slipping into the tendentiousness characteristic of bad discipline history by identifying their interpretation of the discipline's past with a single contemporary disciplinary approach.
I am not offended by tendentiousness in debate.
He did not prove anything in the way of tendentiousness; he did not prove the obscurity, and he did not prove the absurdity.