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"countermove" Definitions
  1. a move designed to check, offset, or counter another move

46 Sentences With "countermove"

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

He tries to countermove by offering her his poison tea.
He had the perfect countermove for the Giants' defensive strategy.
But it was a major strategic countermove against the United States.
I'll put my finals plans in the freezer and await the next countermove.
Now, it's making its countermove in the cat-and-mouse game of online censorship.
HR 6757, as part of Tax Reform 2.0, is House leadership's first explicit countermove.
He had the perfect countermove for the Giants' defensive strategy, one the Steelers may have planning all along.
This prompted a European Commission source to say the EU was preparing for possible countermove over subsidies for Boeing .
A more diverse state whose more urban voters are friendly to establishment candidates suddenly looks like an appealing countermove.
Washington's response — at least in the nuclear realm — also harks back to the Cold War era: a cycle of move and countermove.
But Iran has slowly stepped back from key components of the deal, in a countermove to pressure Europe to help it avoid American sanctions.
Mitch McConnell's predictable countermove, however, is to simply decline to schedule any Senate votes on Democrats' popular bills, thus getting his members off the hook.
"It wasn't any coincidence, I think, that within minutes of the 'Access Hollywood' tape coming out, they decided that this was their countermove," Mr. Podesta said.
Today, she is readying a countermove to the Trump administration's recent push to expand policies that could bring preexisting conditions roaring back onto the insurance market.
In a countermove, the Trump administration said on Tuesday that even without a new shot of funding, the IRS would somehow make sure those refund checks get sent.
They each bring a different flavor of music to life: "Geometry of Quiet" (Salvatore Sciarrino), "Groove and Countermove" (Dave Douglas) and "L'Amour au théâtre" (Jean-Philippe Rameau's baroque opera).
As a countermove that encourages others to better engage with the kind of work I make, I conclude with a description of how readers can easily create their own summed images.
In an apparent countermove to DC Republicans, national Democrats are backing a group running ads hitting Jenkins for his past entanglements with overcharging health insurers and mocking Morrisey as a carpetbagger.
The then-prime minister made a thinly veiled countermove in the power struggle by announcing his intention to close down dozens of private prep schools in Turkey, many of which were Gulenist.
We want to be able to explain things to clients — how a fund is built, what it will do, what it won't do — and this is literally a countermove in the opposite direction.
Hamer's speech zigzags like a thunderbolt across the panels as they sketch the shocked audiences: journalists in the convention ballroom, ordinary families watching at home, President Johnson plotting his countermove from the Oval Office.
The Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and the countermove by the Iranians to send its Iranian Revolutionary Guards there through Syria, began in June 1982, weeks before Malcolm Kerr was to start the new job.
By the end of "Groove and Countermove" (2000), Brown's choreography, with its postmodern sense of stage space and many independent yet harmonizing elements, manages to complement Dave Douglas's jazz score without any jazz vocabulary.
Hallmark's move and countermove shine a light on pain as well as progress: Damaging attitudes toward LGBTQ communities still permeate pop culture, but it's no longer possible to quietly get a pass on something like this.
" But Borhan Osman, a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group in Afghanistan, said a cease-fire might be an effective countermove at a time when "more than 90 percent of the attacks in Afghanistan are initiated by the insurgency.
Who knows how long it will be possible to experience the laid-back elegance of works like "Opal Loop," in which dancers follow enigmatic pathways like loose-limbed visitors from another world, or "Groove and Countermove," a more explosive work, last seen a decade ago?
" For the Joyce season, the company is presenting "Groove and Countermove" (2000), set to music by the jazz composer Dave Douglas; "Geometry of Quiet" (2002), to Salvatore Sciarrino's flute score; and "L'Amour au Théâtre" (2009), inspired by Jean-Philippe Rameau's opera, "Hippolyte and Aricie.
This is the story of how the US finally achieved some leverage over China to bring a stop to more than a decade of rampant cybertheft, how a Canadian couple became bargaining chips in China's desperate countermove, and how the game ended happily—only to start up again in recent months with more rancor and new players.
And now Iran's countermove — in response to the U.S. withdrawal from the nuclear deal and reimposition of sanctions designed to drive Iran's oil sales to zero — has reportedly been to deploy proxies and covert operatives to attack oil and gas tankers passing through the Persian Gulf, forcing the U.S. to protect all of those shipping lanes.
Here her company performs three works from this century: "Groove and Countermove" (25500), set to progressive jazz by Dave Douglas; "Geometry of Quiet" (292), an intimate work to Salvatore Sciarrino's flute music; and "L'Amour au Théâtre" (213), which takes inspiration from Jean-Philippe Rameau's opera "Hippolyte and Aricie" and is a potent reminder of Brown's gift for mixing elaborate gestural sequences with inventive partnering.
This man draws on the lack of prospect of getting away unsuspected. It works by anticipating the audience's expectations, and then combatting that expectation with a countermove. This pattern of anticipating and then contradicting an audience's expectation has continued to be a typical move in reverse probability arguments to this day. Of course, another countermove of this same type can also be employed (it could be argued that the large man could have committed the crime precisely because he thought he would be too obvious a suspect), and then another, and then another.
They teach him their respective skills and ask him to perform for each other to see. Hong Qigong teaches Yang Guo his 'Dog Beating Staff Technique'. Ouyang Feng has apparently lost after Yang Guo performed the last stance, 'No Dogs Under Heaven'. Ouyang Feng spends the following night thinking of a countermove.
Rupert Matthews, Hitler: Military Commander (Arcturus, 2003), p. 115. The Chief of the General Staff, General Ludwig Beck warned Hitler that the German Army would be unable to successfully defend Germany against a possible retaliatory French attack.Rupert Matthews, Hitler: Military Commander (Arcturus, 2003), p. 113. Hitler reassured Fritsch that he would withdraw his forces if there were a French countermove.
As Lee's offensive strategy became clear, Union general- in-chief Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck planned a countermove that could take advantage of the now lightly defended Confederate capital of Richmond. He ordered the Union Department of Virginia, two corps under Maj. Gen. John A. Dix, to move on Richmond from its locations on the Virginia Peninsula (around Yorktown and Williamsburg) and near Suffolk.
735 In addition, Strang argued that widespread rumours in March 1939 of an imminent German move somewhere in Eastern Europe led to the need for some sort of dynamic British countermove to forestall another German coup, like those of 15 March against Czechoslovakia and 23 March, which saw a German ultimatum to Lithuania to return the Memelland at once.Strang, Bruce "Once more onto the Breach: Britain's Guarantee to Poland, March 1939", pp.
A démarche (; from the French word whose literal meaning is "step"'Démarche' in Dictionnaire.com (in French) or "solicitation") has come to refer either to # a line of action; move; countermove; maneuver, especially in diplomatic relations, or # formal diplomatic representation (diplomatic correspondence) of the official position, views, or wishes on a given subject from one government to another government or intergovernmental organization. Diplomatic démarches are delivered to the appropriate official of the government or organization. Démarches generally seek to persuade, inform, or gather information from a foreign government.
Antonio immediately clear deception to the detriment of Italian voters and so designing a countermove, accepting the proposal to join the sinister group of candidates. On the day that Antonio must keep in Rome his speech to the voters, he signs his electoral suicide, since it reveals the voters to be a fraud and, moreover, insults everyone, provoking the ire of the people. It seems that Antonio is crazy, instead he did it just to impeach his shady those colleagues who needed votes. Now that Antonio is discouraged, they too have fallen into the abyss.
This resulted in an Order of Protection, issued in her favor, which contained a clause that Getz must be sober to be allowed into the house and an Order he go to treatment. As a countermove, Getz filed for divorce from Monica in 1981, but the couple reconciled at his insistence in 1982 and signed a Reconciliation Agreement, in which they agreed to jointly buy a house they found in San Francisco. Soon after, however, Getz relapsed and also developed cancer. After a second illegal gun/cocaine incident, Monica returned to their New York home.
During the attack, the Allies shot down only a single Japanese Nakajima Ki-43. As a countermove, the Allies began night raids against the Japanese lines on the Malay peninsula and provided air protection for refugee convoys from Singapore. For Operation "L", the Japanese army had transported the 229th Infantry Regiment of the 38th Infantry Division from Hong Kong to Cam Ranh Bay in Indo-China. From there, eight transports departed on 9 February 1942, protected by a cruiser, four destroyers, five minesweepers and two submarine hunters under the command of Rear Admiral Shintarō Hashimoto to invade Bangka and Palembang.
In the meantime, Solomon was able to defeat Teimuraz and focused on his recalcitrant subject Rostom, Duke of Racha. Rostom dispatched his brother Besarion, Catholicos of Abkhazia and, hence, the head of an Orthodox church in western Georgia, to the Ottoman pasha in Akhaltsikhe to ask aid against Solomon. In a countermove, Solomon dispatched Joseph with the promise of peace in exchange for the arrest of Catholicos Besarion. Solomon’s diplomacy won and Besarion was cast in prison in Akhaltsikhe, but he escaped to the Principality of Mingrelia and declared himself "catholicos" of the local Orthodox church.
It was largely ruled by comital dynasties, such as the counts of Wölpe in the northwest, the counts of Hallermund in the southwest and the counts of Rhoden in the west and in Hanover. In 1292 Duke Otto the Strict from the Lüneburg line of the Welfs subjugated the region. Earlier, he had yielded to the Bishop of Hildesheim and accepted the city of Hanover as his fief. However, he shook off his allegiance and founded Calenberg Castle, just 13 km west of Hildesheim, in a countermove in order to further reduce the power of the Bishop of Hildesheim in the Hanover area.
Some countries use "competitive strategies" to create cheap weaponry, hardware, and methods to impose on their adversaries a situation where they would need to incur costs of developing countermeasures that are disproportionately higher than the defenses they would be used against. The goal is to make the adversary decide the competition is unaffordable, or force them to redirect resources from other priorities. Countries building cheap diesel-electric submarines as anti-access components would be subjected to the same cost-benefit considerations they are trying to impose, as the U.S. Navy would be equipped with an even cheaper anti-submarine detection system.Move, Countermove in the Anti-Access Game - Thediplomat.
Cat Pack: Miss Le Bomb, Heidi Mortenson, Monotekktoni ... Wired Stuff (Dorfdisco Berlin) 2006 saw the release of 'The Wired Ones', a compilation CD featuring artists such as Kevin Blechdom, Heidi Mortenson, Dynasty Handbag, Angie Reed and Scream Club. All in all the compilation featured 16 women in electronic music, and was promoted with no announcement of the then unusual line-up. This was a countermove to a certain triple cd compilation coming out that same month, being promoted as the leading women in electronic music, although most of the women were not involved in the music production, which contradicts the making of electronic music. The Wired Ones record release party was held at Lido in Berlin and exceeded to the venues limit with 500 guests.
Transnational history is an approach in historiography which places emphasis on historical phenomena that are not shaped by national categories such as the movement of people or ideas. According to historian Akira Iriye, "transnational history may be defined as the study of movements and forces that have cut across national boundaries" in a variety of contexts. Originating in American Studies, the term has been applied by historians who seek to avoid taking national history as the "natural" frame for historical analysis and instead look at the past without the framing of the nation state. This redirection of historical studies can be seen as countermove to the fact that the field of history was founded in the 19th century while the nationalist movement was on the rise in Europe.
Emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia granted Britain use of a port along the Baro May 15, 1902, and in 1907 the port and a customs station were founded at Gambela. A shipping service run by Sudan Railways linked Khartoum with Gambela, a distance of 1,366 kilometers. According to Richard Pankhurst, by the mid-1930s boats sailed twice a month during the rainy season, taking seven days downstream and eleven upstream.Richard Pankhurst, An Economic History of Ethiopia (Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie University Press, 1968), p. 304 According to Bahru Zewde, British interest in the concession was due, in part, to the attraction of ' tapping the allegedly fabulous commercial potential of Western Ethiopia and drawing the whole region into the economic orbit of the Sudan ', but also intended ' to be a brilliant British countermove to avert the virtual commercial hegemony in Ethiopia that the Jibouti-Addis Ababa Railway seemed to promise the French.
The military unit raised and financed in Guayaquil was given the name of ' ("Division for the Protection of Quito"). Its immediate purpose was to advance on the cities of Guaranda and Ambato, in the central highlands, hoping to bring them to the independence movement, and cutting all road communication between Quito and the cities of Guayaquil and Cuenca, so as to forestall any Royalist countermove from the north. The Division, under the command of Colonels Luis Urdaneta and León Febres-Cordero, both of them ringleaders of the revolt in Guayaquil, began its advance out of the coastal plain towards the highlands, and by November 7, was ready to begin its march up the Andes mountains. The first clash with a Royalist covering force was a success, occurring on November 9, 1820, at Camino Real, a strategic mountain pass along the road from Guayaquil to Guaranda.

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