Unfortunately, even eyewitnesses had skewed recollections and several were downright fraudulent (in the interest of protecting the company). In many cases, analysis and forensics have proven to be more accurate than people that were there.
A fact is that there were 2200 people on the titanic and an opinion is that the Titanic should never have been built!
The ship was 882 feet 9 inches long, 91 feet wide, 176 feet tall, and 46,000 tons of water displacement. The ship could also make 21.5 knots on average speed.
she died in 2009 and was92 last titanic survivor and youngest passenger
fact: zigzag told the other boys it was his birthdayfast: Onions are delicious and nutritious
Rose died as an old woman just like Jack said.
There are two questions here, and they've both been answered already. Use the links below to gather facts.
If you are referring to the Titanic, Jack Dawson is not a real person. Although for awhile there was some disputed facts because of a "J.Dawson" signing the passenger list on the Titanic maiden voyage, the J stands for Joseph, not Jack.
Subjective is opinions and objective is facts.
Facts can be proven, where as opinions are points of view.
It is important as historians to recognise the difference because opinions are not necessarily true, or what happened. You can have 2 or more opinions that go against eachother, but there's only one fact. Opinions also show more of the feeling of the time (whether people liked or disliked certain events), rather than what actually happened. Some effects that are fact, were sparked off by opinions, they are interlinked, but definitely different.
some people say things that they think are facts but are really opinions
opinions
A research article is an article written based on the collection of many facts. Theoretical papers are ones written based on someone's educated opinions.
There are real facts about it. They tell facts not opinions. Opinions are how it think or feels.
An ideology is not a set of facts, it is a set of opinions. The opinions generally do relate to facts in some way, but these opinions are conclusions based on those facts (or sometimes based on errors or delusions) rather than being factual in themselves.
Facts
Opinions are what someone thinks and are not facts.
No, opinions are opinions. Opinions are just what people think from what they know, and are not actual facts.
No, presenting opinion as fact is not a writing technique. It is considered misleading and can undermine the credibility of the writer. It is important to distinguish between opinions and facts in writing to maintain clarity and objectivity.