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138 Sentences With "combativeness"

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

When Zhao speaks in public, his natural combativeness comes through.
Combativeness was part of Mr. McLaughlin's style from the beginning.
Why squander all that combativeness and impulsiveness on Twitter insults?
Lewandowski has a history of combativeness with House Democrats in congressional testimony.
If voters reward ideology and combativeness, that is what politicians will give them.
There are dangers in increased Democratic combativeness, but even greater dangers in timidity.
He also finds the president's routine combativeness unsettling, not to mention his impeachment.
But Mr. Clinton showed none of the combativeness and anger of Mr. Trump.
People who want to see Patrick run see empathy, not combativeness, as the key.
But the unmistakable reference suggests that Kuma has never quite abandoned his old combativeness.
In praising her combativeness at a rally last month, Trump could have been describing himself.
He went to a philosophy conference and was surprised at the combativeness of the discourse.
We sometimes talk about the substance and combativeness of debates like they're different, even opposed.
Others say the combativeness of witnesses should not deter the impeachment investigation from moving ahead.
Orr, who starred with the Boston Bruins, marveled at Howe's blend of supreme talent and combativeness.
That's led to a new level of combativeness, even as the country reels from hate attacks.
So was the combativeness as Ferrer pushed Hewitt into the corners and frequently into skidding partial splits.
And when the president crosses the line between combativeness into cruelty, he loses some of his base.
Many people hate Donald Trump, and he may have earned their hatred by his combativeness and ruthlessness.
In nonfiction, Robinson approaches her quarry directly, with frank combativeness (or ranting, as her critics have it).
Combativeness may be built into Mr. Penn's personality, but among his peers, he is a popular guy.
The tech industry was almost universally opposed to Mr. Trump, which might give the meeting a touch of combativeness.
Those on the right have countered by supporting a president whose trademark combativeness would never have succeeded in gentler times.
Donald Trump is beginning the new, divided-government phase of his presidency with even more combativeness and disregard for consequences.
Taken together, Trump's tweets set the stage for 2018 and resume the combativeness that helped define his presidency in 2017.
They embraced a style of politics characterized by unceasing combativeness, intemperance and a deep hostility toward compromise and temperamental moderation.
His smugness and combativeness eventually gave way to a mechanical recitation of rehearsed soundbite snippets ostensibly provided by his legal counsel.
Stylistically, it was a clash between the more incisive and prepared Clinton and Trump, who leaned heavily on instinct and combativeness.
For all his public combativeness and his "you're fired" reputation from reality television, Mr. Trump is often reluctant to dismiss advisers.
Over the course of the two decades since she entered public life, Ms. Mugabe garnered a well-deserved reputation for combativeness.
His combativeness extended to his inveterate defense of Western classical music against what he saw as the threat of popular culture.
The traits Trump embodies are narcissism, not humility; combativeness, not love; the sanctification of the rich and blindness toward the poor.
Mr. Cohen, who began his remarks wrung-out and drained, showed the combativeness that had kept him on the Trump payroll.
After bringing new levels of combativeness to the political process, "the only way you survive is to be combative," Trump says now.
Nussbaum reacts to a gendered cultural hierarchy by deploying the weapons of that hierarchy against it: a certain combativeness, a bold swagger.
They worry that Maine, once home to moderate Republicans and independents, will continue on a coarser path, with abrasiveness and combativeness the norm.
First responders cited his "combativeness" as to why they waited so long to attempt to resuscitate him, according to the Dallas Morning News.
His combativeness captures the attitude that many of Mr. Trump's supporters have now, as they see conservatives like Mr. Bannon leaving the administration.
Hopefully he will fulfill the responsibility expected of a president without the combativeness with which he continues to approach the Puerto Rican catastrophe.
But it's the unprompted combativeness that smacks most of the trademark Elon Muskiness that people seem to either love or love to hate.
Mr. Weinstein, who was fired by his company on Sunday, has responded to allegations of sexual misconduct with a mix of contrition and combativeness.
"This anger effect can range from agitation to full-blown rage and combativeness depending on the dosage and the individual's mental set," he wrote.
But given Trump's aggressive diatribes, NATO countries listen to us with less trust, waiting for us to pivot back to combativeness at any moment.
The latest such event, a global public health crisis, seems to have stoked his instincts for combativeness, rather than prompting a demonstration of positive leadership.
For example, Hillary Clinton seems to have been first inspired by a desire to serve children, but over the decades walls of hard-shell combativeness formed.
It's not clear if Trump is combative because he sees the world as dangerous or if he sees the world as dangerous because it justifies his combativeness.
A tale of a swaggering good-time girl in whom compassion and combativeness seem continually at odds, "Iphigenia in Splott" has been seen previously in Cardiff and Edinburgh.
The party's gubernatorial future is a choice between two starkly different styles: the cooperative spirit embraced by Baker and Hogan or the combativeness shown by DeSantis and Kemp.
The blowout dropped the Knicks to 1-6 for a young season that began with promises of 1990s-era combativeness and — after years of unsightly play — restorative competitiveness.
As the House moves toward what even he says is an inevitable vote to impeach him for high crimes and misdemeanors, President Trump toggles between self-pity and combativeness.
As the House moves toward what even he says is an inevitable vote to impeach him for high crimes and misdemeanors, Mr. Trump toggles between self-pity and combativeness.
The president rambled at times, sounded downtrodden at points of the presser and lacked the combativeness that has been a signature of many of his exchanges with the press.
Eric Heisserer's script bounces the alternately American and generally human qualities of combativeness, distrust, hostility, and violence off the inscrutable aliens that post up across the surface of the globe.
Like Secretary of State nominee Mike Pompeo, he doesn't mince words and his appointment fits the President's emerging pattern of surrounding himself with subordinates who mirror his bravado and combativeness.
Until recently, "moral clarity" was more likely to signal combativeness toward the left, not from it: It served for decades as a badge of membership among conservative hawks and cultural crusaders.
SEOUL (Reuters) - Just over three months in office, South Korea's president is finding little room to maneuver between old enemy North Korea and increasing combativeness from long-time ally, the United States.
Fact is, the Trump legislative agenda is entirely conventional (certainly Gillespie has no problem with it) and what sets Trump apart is his populist, guy-on-a-barstool persona and perpetual combativeness.
The faith seems to have made him calm and content, albeit at the loss to his songwriting of the anguish, combativeness and transgressive sexuality that animated some of his strongest 80s material.
Both films are coming-of-age narratives dealing with teen girls experiencing social and sexual awakenings; but American Honey is especially rich with the language, the aliveness, and the uncertain combativeness of youth.
That knee-jerk combativeness earned him national fame and often ridicule as he was parodied on "Saturday Night Live" by actress Melissa McCarthy as a short-tempered spokesman yearning for the President's affection.
He repeatedly made the sexist jibe that Clinton lacked the "stamina" to be president, and also attacked her as a "nasty woman" for criticizing him, suggesting that her political combativeness undermined her femininity.
He cited what he called the "three Cs" of the case — "The crowd, the combativeness of Mr. Gray, and the confined space of the wagon" — and said that Lieutenant Rice had acted reasonably.
Though soft-spoken and reserved, Hicks also readily channeled her boss's combativeness with the press, emailing reporters about their "dishonest" reporting, often focusing on accounts of the enthusiasm and size of Trump's crowds.
At the men's table, a two-seater titled "Zero-Sum Game," you can engage in what the exhibit calls "male political combativeness" over issues like trade or the need for a standing army.
Though an increasing share of voters believe Trump is racist, Gillespie says the Democratic candidates shouldn't grow complacent their combativeness on that issue alone will be enough to propel them to victory in 2020.
While Bolsonaro represents a distinctly Brazilian and deeply militaristic strain of authoritarianism, he has expressed admiration for Trump's combativeness and disregard for political correctness, revealing that he had been "rooting for" Trump in 2016.
This bad boy, anti-PC posture adopted by Barstool is a deliberate part of their brand-building; a beer can-crushing combativeness recognizable to almost anyone who has ever set foot in a college fraternity.
In a 60 Minutes interview that aired Sunday, Heitkamp further justified her vote against Kavanaugh as based on both her experience working with domestic assault victims and on Kavanaugh's "anger and combativeness" during his testimony.
Kavanaugh showed none of the combativeness that marked his last appearance in the public eye when he emphatically denied multiple sexual assault allegations and attacked Democratic senators questioning his fitness for the nation's highest bench.
Evening programming, which embodied the Fox News brand, was dominated by right-wing commentators like Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity, who hurled opinions and vented resentments with a pugnacity that reflected their boss's own combativeness.
"Getting to understand Trump's appeal because of his irreverent confidence, combativeness, the kind of candor that...a lot of these other guys lack -- that's understandable," Sayegh said on the Greg Gutfeld Show in July of 2015.
Instead, audio interviews with the founding members, Liam and Noel Gallagher — brothers infamous for their out-in-the-open combativeness toward each other — and bandmates, relatives and associates, are woven together to form an engaging narration.
He has been a perfect gentleman in responding to Mr. Trump's overheated rhetoric about his record, welcoming him to the White House and keeping quiet about his unpresidential combativeness after narrowly winning an electoral-vote majority.
Ulis played at a high school in the Chicago area, which also produced Isiah Thomas, who, while taller than Ulis, at 6 feet 1 inch, played with a similar intensity and combativeness that offset his small stature.
The frenetic yet seemingly pointless combativeness could be a strategy in its own right — shiny objects for the base to let him run out the clock and drag the Republican Party toward the center on some key issues.
As CNN's Chris Cillizza points out, members leaving say in-party fighting among Republicans between those who see themselves as the "governing wing" and those putting a higher priority on ideology and combativeness is sowing chaos and dysfunction.
He announced in December that he planned to write a book to "set the record straight" about his time at the White House, a term defined by his combativeness behind the podium and tendency to provide misleading information.
Ted Lindsay, a Hall of Fame player who packed a fierce combativeness in a slight frame as he helped the Detroit Red Wings win four Stanley Cup championship titles, died on Monday at his home in Oakland Township, Mich.
But those same qualities have also created some of the toxic culture that now exists at Uber, and his personal combativeness got him in trouble this week when a video of him arguing with an Uber driver was released.
That changed with Mr. Trump's recent combativeness toward investigators, and four senators — Mr. Graham and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, both Republicans, and Chris Coons of Delaware and Cory Booker of New Jersey, both Democrats — reached a compromise this month.
Each increase in the Hong Kong police's use of force during the antigovernment protests has been met with greater anger from the public and more combativeness from hard-core demonstrators, which in turn have prompted more intense tactics from the police.
There was also combativeness, and fearmongering about immigrants, and boasts specific and unquantifiable — America's economy was "the hottest," as if Mr. Trump were pitching a new hotel — and introductions of guest after emotional guest, all stuffing a Dagwood-sandwich speech.
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Sofia Kenin showed grit and combativeness on the way to her maiden Grand Slam title on Saturday, as the 210-year-old American fought her way back from a set down to beat Spain's Garbine Muguruza in the Australian Open final.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders, a fierce loyalist of President Donald Trump who channeled his combativeness toward the news media, will leave her job at month's end for a possible political future in her home state of Arkansas, Trump said on Thursday.
Moody has not shown the same trademark flare for political combativeness her predecessor and Trump ally-turned-aide Pam Bondi has, but she has kept many of Bondi's priorities intact, like overturning Obamacare, and has begun to develop her own relationship with the president.
The news accounts of this rightly focused on Trump's gratuitous combativeness with the leader of one of our closest allies, but I was equally riveted by another detail: The president spent a portion of the call reliving and reveling in his Electoral College victory.
The theatricality and combativeness on display in the Spin Room — and the animated chatter ricocheting across the TV studios and Twitter feeds — are more likely to pique citizens' political interest than are antiseptic or Olympian declarations that purport to tell us all we need to know.
Also notable was not simply the lack of combativeness on the part of Ford, but also the degree to which she went out of her way to be helpful and also to apologize throughout the hearing for when she could not remember something or misunderstood a question.
A shrouded endorsement process As Turner has led protests against the Democratic National Committee for being a closed, insider game — with a combativeness that has unsettled some on her own board — many Our Revolution endorsements have been issued with limited or no conversations with competing candidates.
"These disputes with other Democrats, even as he cements a position atop the presidential primary field, are prompting nervousness and alarm among many of them over whether Sanders can set aside decades-old habits of combativeness and confrontation and bring the party together to take on a president they revile," Sean Sullivan and Michael Scherer report.
But two things are clear: • Some of Mr. Trump's lowest moments in past polls have come as he has struggled to serve in the traditional presidential role of national healer, most memorably after his "blame on both sides" response to the neo-Nazi violence last year in Charlottesville, Va. • Mr. Trump — defiant, defensive and eager to blame the news media for his combativeness — does not seem interested in changing his approach in the final days of 2018 campaigning.
New York Times: 3 July 2006. Cristina Álvarez Rodríguez claims that Evita has never left the collective consciousness of Argentines. Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the first woman elected President of Argentina, claims that women of her generation owe a debt to Eva for "her example of passion and combativeness".
Known for his tackling ability as well as his combativeness and hard work, Gabi could both break down opposition attack and dictate play with the ball with equal effectiveness. He was also known to be proficient when in possession, capable of delivering through balls and distributing the ball at both long and short lengths.
Although the group had been created in June 1906 after the parliamentary elections of that year, their popular name was given to them by the journalist Vlasis Gavriilidis, in an article in the Akropolis newspaper on 10/23 February 1907, where he likened their combativeness with the ferocity displayed by the Japanese soldiers during the recent Russo-Japanese War.
According to Ștefan Cazimir, Rondelul orașului mic ("The Rondel of the Small Town") shows a "likable wave of irony and self- irony", and the poet himself coming to terms with "the existence of a world who ignores him." Proof of his combativeness was still to be found in Rondelul contimporanilor ("The Rondel of the Contemporaries").Vianu, Vol.II, p.
They needed little encouragement to use these weapons, earning surly reputations for gambling, brawling, and various forms of mischief. Their uniforms and coats of grey helped enhance their tough appearance. But their combativeness could prove useful as they often found themselves attacked by Cossacks and Spanish and Tyrolian guerillas. Each train d'artillerie battalion was originally composed of 5 companies.
Cedric Watts noted that during the twentieth century, more and more performances favoured a feminist Beatrice with an increased combativeness. Regardless of whether Beatrice can be considered a contemporary feminist, she certainly disrupted conventional sixteenth-century gender norms. Some argue that Beatrice appropriates phallic language and thereby places herself among male society. Her speech is more typical of male characters of the period.
From this position he launched 13 general strikes against Radical Raúl Alfonsín's government. However, the CGT's combativeness subsided once Peronism was back in power. In 1989 Ubaldini was displaced as head of the CGT by supporters of President Carlos Menem. Although he had backed Menem's election campaign publicly, Ubaldini opposed Menem's free market reforms and refused to vacate the CGT building.
Midway through the next season, he was traded to the New York Rangers. He would spend the remainder of that year and the following three with a rapidly improving Ranger club. Although a popular and consistent performer with the Rangers, he was sent to the Philadelphia Flyers for the 1969-70 season. His experience and combativeness helped the small and unaggressive Flyers team.
The two became a high-profile Hollywood couple, but it was not a smooth marriage. Both drank heavily, and Methot gained a reputation for her violent excesses when under the influence. They became known in the press as "The Battling Bogarts," with Methot known, due to her combativeness, as "Sluggy". Bogart later named his motor yacht Sluggy in her honor.
As for the previous singles from the album Une Présence, "Petit Frank" was written by Jean-Marie Moreau, while the music was composed by François Feldman himself. The song enjoys a "genuine sensitivity" and its "main character is a boy, abandoned or orphaned, presumably placed at the Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, faltering between combativeness and vulnerability".Elia Habib, Muz hit. tubes, p.
The forms were divided out across behavioral indicators to keep participants from selecting the same set of behaviors. The forms had equal amounts of behaviors assessing dominance, submission, agreeableness and combativeness. The researchers found that social roles determined agentic behavior at work, not gender roles. When looking at gender composition and communal behavior it was found that gender role, and not social role influenced communal behaviors.
For instance, on December 26, 1968, Ion Iliescu convened an urgent session of the UTC's Central Committee to express his distress at the lack of combativeness displayed by UTC members toward 2,000 Christmas carolers the day before."Ion Iliescu a condamnat colindătorii în 1968 până i-a băgat la beci " ("Ion Iliescu Condemned the Carolers in 1968 until He Put Them in Prison"), Gândul, December 20, 2006.
Resistive fear of needles occurs when the underlying fear involves not simply needles or injections but also being controlled or restrained. It typically stems from repressive upbringing or poor handling of prior needle procedures (for example, forced physical or emotional restraint). This form of needle phobia affects around 20% of those afflicted. Symptoms include combativeness, high heart rate coupled with extremely high blood pressure, violent resistance, avoidance, and flight.
Stories and anecdotes about Mungo tend to emphasize his reputation for combativeness, including episodes of drinking and fighting. "Mungo and I got along just fine", reported Casey Stengel, his manager on the Dodgers. "I won't stand for no nonsense, and then I duck." The most widely told story concerns a visit to Cuba where, supposedly, Mungo was caught in a compromising position with a married woman by her husband.
Only the flesh of young Silurus glanis specimens is valued as food. It is palatable when the catfish weighs less than 15 kg (33 lb). Larger than this size, the fish is highly fatty and additionally can be loaded with toxic contaminants through bioaccumulation due to its position at the top of the food chain. Large S. glanis are not recommended for consumption, but are sought out as a sport fish due to their combativeness.
"For a brief span of a few years", wrote a sportswriter of the day, "this hammered down little strongman actually rivaled the mighty Ruth." While Wilson's combativeness and excessive alcohol consumption made him one of the most colorful sports personalities of his era, his drinking and fighting undoubtedly contributed to a premature end to his athletic career and, ultimately, his premature death. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979.
Cavendish completed the Giro, but lost the points classification to 's Joaquim Rodríguez by a single point. He did win the minor Azzurri d'Italia and stage combativeness classifications. Cavendish competed in the Ster ZLM Toer GP Jan van Heeswijk, in mid-June. Despite failing to win any of the four, mostly flat, stages, Cavendish's consistency ensured that he won the overall general classification—the first of his professional career—by eight seconds.
Ian Andrew Healy AO (born 30 April 1964) is an Australian former international cricketer who played for Queensland domestically. A specialist wicketkeeper and useful right-hand middle-order batsman, he made an unheralded entry to international cricket in 1988, after only six first-class games. His work ethic and combativeness was much needed by an Australian team. Over the next decade, Healy was a key member of the side as it enjoyed a sustained period of success.
In hospitals, sitters are hired by the hospital for patients who cannot remain unsupervised for even a short period of time. These include patients who are at risk for injury to themselves or others due to disorientation or combativeness, and those whose vital signs are severely unstable. Companions also work on psychiatric wards or in mental institutions, caring for patients who have been observed attempting suicide. This is known as suicide watch or intense suicide observation.
DVG joined the Humanistische Alliantie ("Humanist Alliance"), a national umbrella for humanist organisations founded in 2001, but because they found this coalition much too postmodernist and moderate, the freethinkers were hardly involved in its activities. Under chairship of Anton van Hooff, who opined that the 'combativeness against religion and other unscientific quackery' is threatening to disappear with the 'softened' humanist groups, they left the Alliantie in 2014, and instead sought to work with amongst others Stichting Skepsis and the Vereniging tegen de Kwakzalverij.
In a few cases stupor and hyperactivity can continue for weeks or even months. During the excitement phase individuals show combativeness and can have delusions and hallucinations and can also pose a danger to themselves or others and can make marked destruction of property. In the later stages of medium and even more in the severe (and, if left untreated, lethal) state they will also experience autonomic instability. Childhood schizophrenia increases the risk for autistic catatonia later in life dramatically.
In 1980, Hislop ran for Toronto City Council. He won the support of then-Mayor John Sewell, a move that contributed to Sewell's defeat.New York Times: Andrew H. Malcolm, "Toronto Voters Oust Mayor Known for Combativeness," November 12, 1980, accessed February 22, 2012 The Toronto Police Association openly campaigned against both Sewell and Hislop in the election. The following year, Hislop ran in the 1981 provincial election as an independent candidate in St. George to protest against the 1981 Toronto bathhouse raids.
In 1872 Cavallotti was elected to the Italian Parliament as deputy for Corteolona. When sworn in Cavallotti took the oath of allegiance, despite having lampooned the oath in his articles. Eloquent and turbulent, his combativeness in and out of Parliament secured for him the leadership of the extreme Left on the death of Agostino Bertani in 1886. During his twelve years' leadership his party increased in number from twenty to seventy, and at the time of his death his parliamentary influence was greater than ever before.
Trained as a stenographer, Diop first worked as a secretary at the town hall of Rufisque, then at Aristide Le Dantec Hospital in Dakar. On 2 February 1975, she joined the Democratic Party of Senegal (PDS) –founded in 1974– upon Abdoulaye Wade's visit to her native town. She stood out for her activism and her combativeness and was notably arrested twice for "unauthorised demonstrations" in 1988 and 1993. Diop was elected as a deputy to the National Assembly for the first time in 1993.
Paradoxical reactions such as anxiety, delirium, combativeness, hallucinations, and aggression can also occur following benzodiazepine overdose. Gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea and vomiting have also been occasionally reported. Cases of severe overdose have been reported and symptoms displayed might include prolonged deep coma or deep cyclic coma, apnea, respiratory depression, hypoxemia, hypothermia, hypotension, bradycardia, cardiac arrest, and pulmonary aspiration, with the possibility of death. Severe consequences are rare following overdose of benzodiazepines alone but the severity of overdose is increased significantly if benzodiazepines are taken in overdose in combination with other medications.
He is renowned for his ball carrying ability and strength, as well as crowd-pleasing "big hits", or impact tackles. He also represents a solid line-out option and is near the complete back-rower due to combativeness at the breakdown. He is yet to establish himself as a starter for the senior Leinster team, but has made five appearances, as well as playing regularly for both the "A" and u-20 sides. While attending Blackrock College he helped the school to win both the Senior and Junior cup.
Mills was described as a man in a hurry. Aside from his hurried nature, he was largely known for his combativeness. Both his private life, with four marriages to three women, a child from each, and several affairs, and his professional life, which involved challenging and criticizing many of his professors and coworkers, have been characterized as "tumultuous". He wrote a fairly obvious, though slightly veiled, essay in criticism of the former chairman of the Wisconsin department, and he called the senior theorist there, Howard P. Becker, a "real fool".
This eventually led Sherman to form Apotex, where he earned a reputation among both competitors and government regulators for extreme combativeness, often including litigation. His four cousins, who were supposed to have received 5 percent stakes in Empire, later sued Sherman unsuccessfully over his sale of Empire. In 1971 he married his wife Honey, who would later rise to prominence in Canadian philanthropy, serving on the boards of several prominent charities. The two were found slain in their home late in 2017 by unknown assailants, according to the Toronto Police, who are investigating the case.
He is shown with strong shoulders and a keen, alert gaze, in which some detect an air "of combativeness...disquietude...and misgiving". Unlike the Madrid canvas, the portrait does not refer to his occupation as a painter, although art historian David Rosand believes that "instead of an implement of his craft, however, the open brushwork itself declares the painter's art". Further, the emphasis on his hands may reference that as a painter his talent derived from them. That the canvas is unfinished gives insight into Titian's working methods and techniques.
The Giro, like the 2009 Vuelta a España before it and the forthcoming Tour de France, began in the Netherlands. The two Dutch Professional Continental teams, and , had both ridden Grand Tours in 2009. Throughout the season, the two teams tried to prove their combativeness in the hopes of securing Grand Tour invites, trying especially to outdo one another. Since the openings to the Giro and the Tour were partly financed by Dutch tax money, Vacansoleil's team manager called for political help to get invites for his team, but neither Dutch team made it into either the Giro or the Tour.
In a 1946 letter to Bernard DeVoto, Korn's friend and collaborator Dale L. Morgan related a story told by Korns. :…A year or so ago I was conducting with Rod Korns a long-distance argument on some question or other relating to Western history, and in the course of the argument we arrived at a point where certain evidences were in dispute. I would not allow them the status of "facts," and Rod with his usual combativeness assured me that that was precisely what they were, facts, brother, facts. So then he told me a story.
There is no antidote, and supportive care is the mainstay of further treatment for intoxication. Though sometimes referred to as a deliriant and while muscarine was first isolated from A. muscaria and as such is its namesake, muscimol does not have action, either as an agonist or antagonist, at the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor site, and therefore atropine or physostigmine as an antidote is not recommended. If a patient is delirious or agitated, this can usually be treated by reassurance and, if necessary, physical restraints. A benzodiazepine such as diazepam or lorazepam can be used to control combativeness, agitation, muscular overactivity, and seizures.
Despite having theorized "instrumentalism", which reacted against the traditional guidelines of poetry, he maintained a lifelong connection with Neoclassicism and its ideal of purity. Macedonski's quest for excellence found its foremost expression in his recurring motif of life as a pilgrimage to Mecca, notably used in his critically acclaimed Nights cycle. The stylistic stages of his career are reflected in the collections Prima verba, Poezii, and Excelsior, as well as in the fantasy novel Thalassa, Le Calvaire de feu. In old age, he became the author of rondels, noted for their detached and serene vision of life, in contrast with his earlier combativeness.
298 In Algiers in 1943, Eisenhower gave de Gaulle the assurance in person that a French force would liberate Paris and arranged that the army division of French General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque would be transferred from North Africa to the UK to carry out that liberation. Eisenhower was impressed by the combativeness of units of the Free French Forces and "grateful for the part they had played in mopping up the remnants of German resistance"; he also detected how strongly devoted many were to de Gaulle and how ready they were to accept him as the national leader.
Gasparino, known for being highly combative on-air (Marketwatch described him as "Fox's Rocky Balboa"), was reported in The Washington Post as saying that "[his] job was to rip the lungs out of the competition for Fox Business Network."Howard Kurtz "Fox Business Lures Gasparino Away From CNBC", The Washington Post, 2010-02-16. Retrieved on 2010-02-17. A Financial Times profile of Gasparino illustrates his combativeness, describing him as a "pugnacious pundit Wall Street can't ignore", citing as examples Gasparino's frequent run-ins with colleagues, including then-fellow CNBC reporter Dennis Kneale, and cycling star Lance Armstrong.
Huelskamp went on to win the general election with 68% of the vote. ;2016 Huelskamp was defeated in the Republican primary by Roger Marshall, an obstetrician from Great Bend, by 58% to 42%. Marshall's supporters argued Huelskamp's combativeness hurt the district. House leadership had removed Huelskamp from the House Agriculture Committee in 2012; farm groups such as Kansas Farm Bureau, an affiliate of the American Farm Bureau Federation, Kansas Livestock Association, an affiliate of the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, National Association of Wheat Growers and the US Chamber of Commerce endorsed Marshall, as many Republican voters saw it as a crucial issue in a farm state.
He was a member of the Legislative Council for the Eastern Cape, from 1882 until 1888, and once again for the House of Assembly from 1889 until his death. He served as Commissioner of Crown Lands for the Upington Ministry (1884-1886) and for Sprigg's second Ministry (1886-1890) Colonel Schermbrucker was an avid imperialist, a strong admirer of Cecil Rhodes and Jameson, a fervid initiator of the Cape's Progressive party, and a skilled orator. He carried decorations from the Pope, the Gaika War, the disastrous Basuto Gun War and the Anglo-Zulu War. His political personality was a memorable mixture of clowning and combativeness.
Secretary Ickes addresses the crowd gathered at the dedication of right Ickes served simultaneously in several major roles for Roosevelt. Although he was the Secretary of the Interior, he was better known to the public for his simultaneous work as the director of the Public Works Administration, where he directed billions of dollars of projects designed to lure private investment and provide employment during the depths of the Great Depression. His management of the PWA budget and his opposition to corruption earned him the name "Honest Harold." He regularly presented projects to Roosevelt for the President's personal approval, but also clashed no less often with FDR and other Cabinet colleagues, being noted for combativeness in debate.
Researchers believed Butler had good intentions for Genie, but criticized Butler's unwillingness to work with them and thought she negatively affected Genie's care and the case study. They strongly contested Butler's claims of pushing Genie too hard, contending that she enjoyed the tests and could take breaks at will, and both Curtiss and Kent emphatically denied Butler's accusations towards them. The research team viewed Butler as personally troubled, noting her longstanding and widely known reputation for combativeness among coworkers and superiors. Several of the scientists, including Curtiss and Howard Hansen, recalled Butler openly stating that she hoped Genie would make her famous, and Curtiss especially remembered Butler repeatedly proclaiming her intent to be "the next Anne Sullivan".
Arms of Lyons in 1819. The French Restoration in 1815 again changed the coat of arms of France and Louis XVIII permitted French cities to resume using the arms that they had employed before the Revolution. This returned the three fleur-de-lis to the head of the arms of Lyons. Otherwise, the king augmented through letters-patent of 27 February 1819 the arms of the city with a sword carried in the right paw of the lion in order to commemorate the siege of Lyons the city had endured for the royal cause in 1793 and in recognition of the combativeness of the city in the armed struggle against the Revolution.
Born in Linhares, Espírito Santo, Isaías started his career with Fluminense FC, where he had an unassuming spell. He then represented Friburguense Atlético Clube and Associação Desportiva Cabofriense, and moved to Portugal in 1987, gradually moving up the ranks: first with Rio Ave F.C. then Boavista FC, arriving at S.L. Benfica in 1990. With Benfica, he quickly became a fan favourite at the Estádio da Luz, being also referred to as a "force of nature" due to his stamina and combativeness – he also scored regularly, being the owner of a powerful long-range shot. Arguably his greatest moment with the Lisbon side came on 6 November 1991, in the last round prior to the group stage of the season's European Cup: against Arsenal, at Highbury Park, he assisted once and netted twice in a 3–1 win (4–2 aggregate success).
The trial took place at the Star Inn in Bedminster on 11 April 1821, with Smith testifying against him. The prosecution included a phrenological report undertaken by Mary Anne SchimmelpenninckSmith MD, G. Munro, A History of the Bristol Royal Infirmary, 1917 to attempt to prove Horwood's guilt by the shape of his skull. This claimed that his chief mental characteristics were 'combativeness', 'self-esteem', and 'hope', however the 'bump of murder' which was supposedly a cranial characteristic of all murderers was not present.Smith, Richard, The Horwood Book, Bristol Archives reference number: 35893/36/V_i, The strongest point in Horwood's defence was that the abscess on the brain might have been caused by the unclean dressings on the wound,Halliwell, Dave, An Unjust Hanging: The True Story of John Halliwell, Memoirs Publishing, 2012, p102 and not directly by the stone attack though it would appear that this evidence was never put forward.
37, available here and in March 1938 the Interior decree nominated him governor of the Burgos-based Banco de Crédito Local de España,some authors claim that already in 1919 Lamamie was president of "the local [Salamanca] savings bank", Vincent 1991, p. 165 a bank entrusted with financial aid to municipalities taken over from the Republicans.Heraldo de Zamora 21.03.38, available here Throughout 1938 CNCA and the national syndicalist Francoist administration were increasingly at a collision course, both advancing competitive visions of the rural regime.already during the Republican period Lamamié voiced against fascism, which he equalled to a state dictate; he lambasted it as an imported theory not applicable to Spain, even though he saw some of its features – like “emphasis upon hierarchy and combativeness” – appropriate for Carlist paramilitary units, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 166 The first battleground was Catalonia, where on areas seized by the Nationalists the traditional local body, Instituto Agricola Catalan de San Isidro, tried to reassert its domination.
Overfeeding does not speed recovery, and if the person has diabetes, it will simply produce hyperglycemia afterwards. A mnemonic used by the American Diabetes Association and others is the "rule of 15" – consuming 15 grams of carbohydrate followed by a 15-minute wait, repeated if glucose remains low (variable by individual, sometimes 70 mg/dl). If a person has such severe effects of hypoglycemia that they cannot (due to combativeness) or should not (due to seizures or unconsciousness) be given anything by mouth, medical personnel such as paramedics, or in-hospital personnel can give intravenous dextrose, concentrations varying depending on age (infants are given 2 ml/kg dextrose 10%, children are given dextrose 25%, and adults are given dextrose 50%). Care must be taken in giving these solutions because they can cause skin necrosis if the IV is infiltrated, sclerosis of veins, and many other fluid and electrolyte disturbances if administered incorrectly.
Rank-and-file from the CGT's largest section, the Steel and Metal Workers' Union, demonstrates in Buenos Aires in 2006. Elections now imminent, the CGT was again split in 1982 over the issue of combativeness, with Plastics Union leader Jorge Triaca heading the pro-dialogue faction at Azopardo Street with the support of UOM leader Lorenzo Miguel, and Ubaldini again heading the more combative faction from Brasil Street. Disunity at the CGT and a renewed wave of strikes dovetailed into an effective campaign message by the Peronists' traditional rivals – the UCR and its nominee, Raúl Alfonsín – who denounced both the ongoing chaos and the association between Labor and the junta, criticizing a "military-labor pact." Elected President of Argentina in 1983, he failed in 1984 to pass a new law through the Senate regulating trade unions and guaranteeing freedom of association, and in negotiations with the CGT, Alfonsín conceded the position of Minister of Labor to a CGT figure (Pasta Makers' Union leader Hugo Barrionuevo).
In his opposition to the Opium Wars, Cobden argued that just as "in the slave trade we [the British] had surpassed in guilt the world, so in foreign wars we have the most aggressive, quarelsome, warlike and bloody nation under the sun." In October 1850 he wrote to Joseph Sturge that if you look at the last 25 years "you will find that we have been incomparably the most sanguinary nation on earth... in China, in Burma, in India, New Zealand, the Cape, Syria, Spain, Portugal, Greece, etc, there is hardly a country, however remote, in which we have not been waging war or dictating our terms at the point of a bayonet." Cobden believed that the British, "the greatest blood-shedders of all", had been then involved in more wars than the rest of Europe put together. He, however, blamed the aristocracy that "converted the combativeness of the English race to its own ends" for such a militarism, not the empire.J.A. Hobson, Richard Cobden: The International Man, London 1919 p.
The British Academy. (2001) Writing in the Shakespeare Newsletter, he said that "the complex relation between Q2 and F remains the chief unsolved problem of the Hamlet texts". E. A. J. Honigmann suggests that Jenkins’ characteristic spirit of combativeness in the notes to the Arden Hamlet may surprise some readers, but that it is “connected to Jenkins' flair for getting at the truth and the great value he places on it.”Honigman, E.A.J. “Harold Jenkins; 1909 — 2000”. Proceedings of the British Academy. 111, 553–572. The British Academy. (2001) He was a visiting professor at Duke University in America from 1957 to 1958. In 1967 he became Regius Professor of Rhetoric and English at the University of Edinburgh. He retired early (in 1971) in London to work on his edition of Hamlet, published in 1982. His work on Hamlet produced eight articles or major lectures, including his British Academy lecture in 1963, "Hamlet and Ophelia", and his 1967 lecture at the University of Edinburgh, "The Catastrophe in Shakespearean Tragedy".

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