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"bridling" Synonyms
controlling restraining curbing checking containing constraining suppressing inhibiting repressing regulating taming governing stifling subduing holding keeping measuring ruling moderating arresting seething bristling prickling seeing red becoming indignant getting angry taking umbrage rearing up taking offense taking offence drawing oneself up becoming annoyed going crook raising your hackles getting your dander up getting your back up getting your hackles up fuming raging storming hindering impeding hampering obstructing restricting trammelling trammeling handicapping encumbering blocking stymieing cramping thwarting fettering retarding preventing pacing limiting managing monitoring administering adjusting methodizing overlooking tempering adapting guiding organising(UK) organizing(US) systematising(UK) exploding flipping becoming enraged going berserk ranting and raving going mad blowing up going bananas going wild flaring up going ballistic hitting the roof getting mad going ape going into a rage harnessing saddling yoking muzzling coupling hitching up putting in harness strapping up forbearing avoiding refraining abstaining eschewing foregoing forgoing withholding abjuring desisting ceasing declining shunning belaying escaping evading omitting taking exception taking something amiss taking something personally getting huffy getting into a huff getting the hump going into a huff teaming inhibition hindrance obstruction restraint restriction bar impediment check obstacle barrier block discouragement suppression constraint deterrent prevention repression More

51 Sentences With "bridling"

How to use bridling in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bridling" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bridling". Mastering all the usages of "bridling" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That's still significant given Trump's unpredictability and habit of bridling.
Mr. Lehman is all bridling thrash, Mr. Shim cool melodicism.
There have already been signs that Mr. Kim is bridling under China's influence.
Yet the bridling executives surmised Mr Ghosn was working towards a merger of Renault and Nissan.
Ireland itself is bridling at interference in affairs that are typically the province of EU member states.
With his popularity ratings stuck behind Mr. Moon's, the usually mild-mannered Mr. Ban began bridling at criticism.
As it happens, he never stopped making vital, bridling music at the cusp of postbop and free jazz.
And Muscovites are bridling at an upcoming election in which non-approved independent candidates will be barred from the ballot.
Allies of both Mr Macron and Mrs Merkel let it be known that their bosses are bridling at each other.
It represents more than just a use of a popular color; coded into these design choices is a sense of bridling.
He uses the media to cement his connection with the masses, while bridling at critical journalism and at rebuffs to executive power.
"The economy is now self-bridling itself, coming back down to a sustainable pace," Daly told the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.
Lincoln's tart drawl earned comparisons to Billie Holiday, but she matched it with a deep, bridling intensity that refused to be displaced.
The trial comes as Turkey deflects criticism from the European Union and rights groups that say it is bridling a once-vibrant press.
But the general's relationship with Mr. Trump had become difficult, with the president bridling at what some describe as his aide's didactic style.
The approach has left many Catalans bridling under what they say is a heavy hand by the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
He is the laureate of bridling, and "Indignation," published in 2008, is as much a study in mulishness as "Portnoy's Complaint," from 1969.
And a couple who had spent their entire lives being scrutinized as pioneers understood what that meant, and instead of bridling at it, leveraged it.
The trial comes as Turkey tries to deflect criticism from the European Union, United States and rights groups that say it is bridling a once-vibrant press.
May's setting a timetable appeased those at home who feared she was bridling at the decision to leave the EU which voters chose in a referendum in June.
President Donald Trump praised his new chief of staff John Kelly on Friday morning, seeming to push back on a new report that he's already bridling at Kelly's leadership.
Studying the case, she developed a theory: Noura was bridling under her mother's rules and killed her for money that she could use to keep partying with her friends.
Happy was the one that she fell in love with, and who made her fall in love with riding — the rituals of bridling and saddling, the thrill of galloping and jumping.
Already bridling at NATO's expansion eastwards into its old Soviet sphere of influence, the Kremlin sees the U.S.-led alliance's new deterrents in the Baltics and eastern Europe as a threat to its security.
But those who hold power in Russia are also nervous young people could become a threat, inspired by a new kind of freedom online and bridling at a political system that offers few meaningful outlets for dissent.
No one, however, adds more crackle than Ms. Rodriguez, whose bridling rage against Nelson's cautious buddies is no less than a howl of exhaustion at lives damaged by drugs, defined by muscle and dominated by male pride.
But such a step would risk provoking a popular backlash and new street demonstrations in a region where many are already bridling at what they see as a heavy hand by the government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy.
WASHINGTON — With the economy stagnating and Congress bridling at President Richard Nixon's heavy-handed spending controls, lawmakers in 1974 created a fast-track procedure to help make the tough decisions on rising budget deficits and swelling entitlement spending.
Like her predecessors, this redheaded Anne (Amybeth McNulty) begins her new life as a spitfire and a romantic, chattering on in exclamatory sentences, thrilling at the beauty of apple trees and bridling at the notion of washing dishes.
Daly said on Wednesday that the U.S. economy is slowing faster than she had earlier thought - "self-bridling" she called it - but added that she believes its near-record-long expansion does not appear to be hitting a dead end.
In which case, I should make it clear that, despite bridling at the implication of a moral equivalence between us and our opponents that runs through John le Carré's novels, I'll take the quiet courage and integrity of George Smiley over the brash antics of 007, any day.
In which case, I should make it clear that, despite bridling at the implication of a moral equivalence between us and our opponents that runs through John le Carré's novels, I'll take the quiet courage and integrity of George Smiley over the brash antics of 290, any day.
As Trump returns to Mar-a-Lago for the first time since being impeached, the risk -- or hope, for some -- is that the two-week stay will plunge Trump back toward his most reflexive behavior, bridling at his lawyers' and Senate Republicans' efforts to rein him in, people close to Trump said.
The bridling wrath of the underclass that we find in Italian neorealism—"I curse the day I was born," is the hero's cry in " Bicycle Thieves " (1948)—is wholly absent, and there's not a whisper of the anarchistic mischief practiced by Buñuel in " Diary of a Chambermaid " (1964), in which the aging patriarch kneels down to unfasten the boots of a bored underling.
Chastity belts have made appearances in erotica. Esar Levine's 1931 Chastity Belts: An Illustrated History of the Bridling of Women compiled erotica of women in chastity belts, with commentary.
Note the rider wears a medical armband. In show jumping, the rider uses a jumping saddle, usually with a square or fitted white pad. Rules on tack are less-stringent, and most forms of bridling and bitting are allowed, including the use of gag bits, hackamores, and any type of noseband. Breastplates and open front boots are usually worn.
He also demanded that the state should promote the economy, in the sense of the early mercantilism, in order to increase tax revenue. This was apparently inspired by Giovanni Botero and other contemporary political theorists. Besides his official writings, he also published a work on the bridling of horses. In 1623, he was raised to the rank of hereditary Imperial Prince.
French's conduct as a judge fully justified the official misgivings: an anonymous satire refers to "snarling, bridling, self-corroding French" and asked where his like for ignorance could be found.Ball p.140 He retired in 1761 and died in 1772. His marriage to Frances, daughter of Sir Richard Hull of Leamcon, County Cork and his second wife Frances Pooley was childless.
Many spanwise rotary kites are two-line control kites. However, UFO-SAM is a single-line rotary Magnus-effect kite; one of the leading makers of the kite has died, but a manufacturer has continued offering the kite.UFO-SAM kite Retrieved 16 March 2011.Kenneth Sams Retrieved 16 March 2011.Kenneth Sams, RIP Retrieved 16 March 2011. A two-line rotary kite using a special control bar is instructed in the patent by J. R. Carnwath filed on 29 March 1948. Kites that revolve but do not obtain lift from the revolving motion are distinct from Magnus-effect lifters or gyrocopting lifting rotating kites; Thomas Ansboro of Scotland, in 1891, instructed in a US patent 464412 about a revolving hexagonal kite where the bridling is critical. A ringed UFO rotary kite patent indicated a special bridling ring and a central rotating ring (US Patent 4779825).
The church teaches that all members should take responsibility in bridling their thoughts, attitudes, feelings, desires, and passions. All members are taught to avoid any talk or activity that may arouse immoral sexual feelings. Members are taught to "let virtue garnish [their] thoughts unceasingly." Apostle Richard G. Scott has taught that through the atonement of Jesus Christ, all desire to sin can be changed and individuals can experience lasting peace.
506 Having an extravagant, even violent, personality and despotic attitudes even towards his children (who were also his pupils), he transported onto the stage something of his personal character, making his performances as Otello and Don Giovanni memorable, but he also succeeded in bridling his exuberance and in getting the style under perfect control, so that he could render his Mozart Count Almaviva a real, proud and elegant, grandee of Spain.
Two major events precipitated a major resurgence in Norwegian literature. In 1811, a Norwegian university was established in Christiania (later renamed Oslo). Seized by the spirit of revolution following the American and French Revolutions, as well as bridling as a result of the forced separation from Denmark and subordination to Sweden subsequent to the Napoleonic wars, Norwegians signed their first constitution in 1814. Virtually immediately, the cultural backwater that was Norway brought forth a series of strong authors recognized first in Scandinavia, and then worldwide.
Horse domestication by the Botai culture in Kazakhstan dates to about 3500 BC. Written records of horse training as a pursuit has been documented as early as 1350 BC, by Kikkuli, the Hurrian "master horse trainer" of the Hittite Empire. Another source of early recorded history of horse training as a discipline comes from the Greek writer Xenophon, in his treatise On Horsemanship. Writing circa 350 BC, Xenophon addressed starting young horses, selecting older animals, and proper grooming and bridling. He discussed different approaches to spirited and dull horses and how to deal with vices.
The figure-8 cavesson is the most popular type. Bits may also vary in severity, and competitors may use any bit, or even a "bitless bridle" or a mechanical hackamore. The ground jury at the show has the right, however, based on veterinary advice, to refuse a bit or bridling scheme if it could cause harm to the horse. Boots and wraps are worn by almost all horses, due to the fact that they may easily injure their legs when landing or when making tight turns at speed.
The tradition of hackamore use in the United States came from the Spanish Californians, who were well respected for their horse-handling abilities.Connell, page 4 From this tradition, the American cowboy adopted the hackamore and two schools of use developed: The "buckaroo" or "California" tradition, most closely resembling that of the original vaqueros, and the "Texas" tradition, which melded some Spanish technique with methods from the eastern states, creating a separate and unique style indigenous to the region.R.W. Miller, p. 103 Today, it is the best known of the assorted "bitless bridling" systems of controlling the horse.
Left and right tracking are adjusted by either placing weight on the tip of a wing, or by weakening the bow on the side that you want the kite to track towards. The design of the kite plays a role in the tendency for the kite to spin and pull, and how much wind the kite can handle. Bridling and tuning are only effective when the kite chosen is able to handle the amount of wind that it is being flown in. If the wind is so strong that the spine and bow are severely distorted, no amount of bridle tuning will help with making the kite controllable.
The number of fast days varies from year to year, but in general the Eastern Orthodox Christian can expect to spend a little over half the year fasting at some level of strictness. There are spiritual, symbolic, and even practical reasons for fasting. In the Fall from Paradise mankind became possessed by a carnal nature; that is to say, became inclined towards the passions. Through fasting, Orthodox Christians attempt to return to the relationship of love and obedience to God enjoyed by Adam and Eve in Paradise in their own lives, by refraining from carnal practices, by bridling the tongue (), confession of sins, prayer and almsgiving.
A Greek statue showing the bitting and bridling system In the next section, Xenophon describes how to make a horse showy, with a great and noble bearing. Ahead of his time, he emphasized that the rider should not pull on the bit nor spur or whip the horse, as this type of riding causes the opposite effect, simply distracting and frightening the animal and causing him to dislike being ridden. Instead, Xenophon urges, the horse must enjoy himself. He should be trained to be ridden on a loose rein, to hold his head high, arch his neck, and paw with his front legs, taking pleasure in being ridden.
Every day he would devote time to it, bridling, mounting and riding it about with ease, while the entire class would watch and admire in amazement his excellent command of this horse. Horsemanship was an important part of the curriculum at West Point. In June 1843 the cadets assembled in the riding hall during their final graduating exercises, where all members performed their riding exercises before the Superintendent, Richard Delafield, and a large assembly of spectators. The academy riding master Henry Hershberger, approached the high-jump bar, raised it another foot, higher than an average man's head, and then called out, "Cadet Grant", prompting a low murmer of wonderment from among the crowd.
Unlike his many of his contemporaries or successors – Grisone, Fiaschi, Pasquale Caracciolo, Claudio Corte, Pirro Antonio Ferraro, Giovanni Paolo d'Aquino, Paolo de' Pavari – who published treatises on various aspects of horsemanship, many of which were soon translated and circulated through much of Europe, Pignatelli never had any work published. A manuscript of his treatise on the veterinary care and treatment of the horse in the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève in Paris was described in 1838. It was divided into three hundred and seventy-six chapters, and included sections on cures for parasites and disease, on bridling and on horse management. A manuscript with the title L'arte veterale is conserved in Verona; a transcription was published in 2001.
In the latter part of 1624 James was employed with John Selden in the examination of the Arundel marbles, and when Selden published his Marmora Arundeliana in 1628 he acknowledged in his preface the assistance he had received from James. James had already been introduced to Sir Robert Bruce Cotton; he soon became Cotton's librarian, and the lists of contents prefixed to many manuscripts in the Cottonian collection are in James's handwriting. In July 1629 he lent to Oliver St John the manuscript tract on the bridling of parliaments, written in 1612 by Sir Robert Dudley, titular duke of Northumberland. The tract was secretly circulated by St. John among the parliamentary leaders; Charles I and his ministers were roused, and James, with Cotton and others, was imprisoned by order of the privy council in the autumn of 1629.

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