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"infuriate" Definitions
  1. to make somebody extremely angry

360 Sentences With "infuriate"

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

They'd either have to infuriate their state's conservatives by refusing to back a qualified nominee or infuriate their own Democratic voters by backing Kavanaugh.
Each successive ruling seemed to infuriate journalists and liberals more.
Such a move would infuriate the Chinese government in Beijing.
A second vote would divide the country and infuriate Leavers.
The FBI has managed to infuriate Republicans and Democrats alike.
It may affirm, challenge, and inspire, or it may infuriate.
He'll infuriate you, he'll delight you, and he'll regularly surprise you.
A big suspension was going to infuriate Wideman and the Flames.
The decision will infuriate Brexiters and will cost May her job.
But it would infuriate many on both sides of the argument.
That should infuriate everyone, regardless of their personal feelings about guns.
Better to leave a few behind than inconvenience and infuriate several hundred.
In Washington, Cruz has done nothing but infuriate the Republican Party establishment.
But it is also likely to infuriate conservative lawmakers and lobbying groups.
While he continues to infuriate the Clinton campaign by battling for Mrs.
Or maybe he'll just infuriate liberals, which is the next best thing.
Great player, but seeing that happen, that should infuriate the whole team.
If he votes to confirm Judge Kavanaugh, he will infuriate Democratic voters.
KUWTK used one person's song to infuriate another person totally off-screen.
These conversations escalate quickly and infuriate easily, but haven't destroyed my relationships.
This seems bound to infuriate Middle Easterners and, indeed, much of the world.
Shirking them would infuriate any number of institutions, starting with the United Nations.
Many northerners think such a ban would infuriate herders and fuel further conflict.
Every vote you cast is going to infuriate one group and delight another.
Why must he infuriate the cooks, front-of-house people, and the Twitterverse?
Cruz did nothing but infuriate the party establishment once he arrived in Washington.
The United States will delight Israel and infuriate Palestinians today at 9 a.m.
Any invalidation of Bemba's candidacy would infuriate his supporters, especially in western Congo.
James Comey is back and ready to infuriate Clinton voters all over again.
But throwing their weight behind Trump threatens to infuriate Cruz's fans in the audience.
It's also likely to infuriate Russia, an ally of the Assad regime in Syria.
That's a telling move on Morris's part, though it will likely infuriate some viewers.
Or choose some third option that will infuriate both Trump's voters and Cruz's voters?
Conservative Edition News is a repository of stories guaranteed to infuriate the American right.
But they infuriate other legal experts who call their commentary shabby and intentionally misleading.
The phone call will almost certainly infuriate Beijing, which sees Taiwan as a breakaway province.
Even the mention of possible action by NATO would be likely to infuriate Mr. Erdogan.
Jaime would make a perfect hostage to infuriate her enemy in the same personal way.
The United States and South Korea also hold joint military exercises that infuriate the North.
The phone call was expected to infuriate Beijing, which sees Taiwan as a breakaway province.
She can cancel half her gigs and infuriate every producer and promoter in the country.
If you've got a sleek, minimalist home theater set up, then PS VR will infuriate you.
This will invigorate the Democratic faithful but infuriate Trump's base and likely further unhinge the President.
But Macron knows unemployment benefit changes are likely to encounter stronger protests, and also infuriate employers.
" And Haberman tweeted: "Nunberg TV is guaranteed to do two things - aggravate Mueller and infuriate Trump.
The transactions, which include precision-guided munitions and combat aircraft, would infuriate lawmakers in both parties.
Inevitably, I'll infuriate and disappoint Bartola now and then, just as she sometimes grates on me.
The Plagiarists seems calculated to infuriate everyone who watches it, but that's very much the point.
If they vote no, they'll disappoint or infuriate loyal Democrats who are their core supporters and volunteers.
They're our life's towering originals, the difficult ones who infuriate us and exhilarate us in equal measure.
Such declarations sometimes infuriate local residents and conservatives who oppose federal ownership of vast stretches of land.
Such a response may infuriate some hardcore supporters, but it is essential to preserving our democratic system.
The idea was that, since Trump badly wanted to be acquitted, delaying the trial would infuriate him.
Schumer left the door open for a potential debt ceiling addition, though it would infuriate House conservatives.
What they have in common is their ability to surprise and confound and even infuriate the audience.
If it does require Israeli territorial concessions, it is certain to infuriate Netanyahu's right-wing allies and rivals.
That would infuriate drivers, leading to calls for jay-walking and on-road cycling to be banned altogether.
This would not only infuriate President Donald Trump, who views arms purchases as something akin to protection money.
Becoming a label will not happen soon, partly because it would infuriate the incumbents who supply most music.
It would make sense that Riverdale's drug trade would infuriate Polly, as it ultimately led to Jason's murder.
But in doing so, she could infuriate the young voters who Sanders has drawn into the political process.
That's likely to infuriate Trump, who's said he's "not thrilled" with the chairman for cutting off easy money.
Whether a medical judgment is optimistic or pessimistic, its inept conveyance can upset or infuriate already anxious patients.
So how do you keep everyone safe and not infuriate local residents with sky-high piles of scooters?
It is also likely to spark a legal fight that could take months to resolve and infuriate Democrats.
Republicans leaders are crafting a must-pass bill that will likely infuriate both conservatives and President Trump's base.
That revelation is sure to infuriate Republicans and lead to further accusations of political bias at the FBI.
That may sound extreme, but this is what happens when you infuriate consumers and their representatives in Congress.
If he tries to preserve close ties with Europe, Mr. Johnson could infuriate hard-line, pro-Brexit voters.
The big picture: A nuke test would infuriate China, and launching an ICBM could precipitate a U.S. military strike.
Such a move would infuriate Trump's critics, who claim he has been too lenient on Russia since taking office.
You're doing April Fools' Day right if you successfully trick and infuriate your dad at the exact same time.
To illustrate its point, the letter shares some wait-time statistics that are likely to infuriate any NYC traveler.
Over the Rainbow seems calculated to infuriate most everyone, since it doesn't pass judgement on Scientology nor condone it.
That air of superiority, ultimately, would infuriate the PLUR kids of the rave scene that catapulted Moby to fame.
It possesses a mood and an ethos that, depending on the player, is equally likely to delight and infuriate.
Ms. Sen said the altered images would likely infuriate women and encourage them to continue protesting the Trump administration.
"On the contrary, Codelco is making things worse...by making statements that only serve to infuriate workers," Ugarte said.
In the Netherlands, Geert Wilders pioneered the use of outrageous tweets that infuriate his opponents and fire up his followers.
The job losses in manufacturing that infuriate Americans have resulted far more from decades of technological advance than from globalisation.
But any move by Mr. Sessions could infuriate Mr. Trump, who has called Mr. Sessions his "biggest mistake" in appointees.
Glencore's investment in Rosneft will infuriate Geneva-based Trafigura, its arch-rival, founded by other former employees of Mr Rich.
Failing to impeach would also, of course, infuriate the Democratic base and set off all kinds of intra-party fighting.
Any such move would infuriate Mr Trump's Sunni counterparts; and for once he preferred diplomatic orthodoxy to rocking the boat.
Washington blacklisted Kim for the first time on Wednesday in a move diplomats say will infuriate the nuclear-armed country.
The implication: While right-wing blowhards may infuriate Democrats, they sometimes pose the greatest danger to their own true believers.
Are there candidates in your community running for any level of office who interest you, inspire you or infuriate you?
Other times they are less obvious: Like some works of conceptual art, they seemed designed to tease and pleasantly infuriate.
The disclosure was said to infuriate C.I.A. officials, and it put pressure on the Justice Department to prosecute Mr. Assange.
Such a move could infuriate the Palestinians, who want East Jerusalem to be their capital in a future Palestinian state.
Why do you continue to look at Facebook posts that infuriate you, or to watch news show that make you agitated?
If you are a liberal who supports the Affordable Care Act because it improves people's lives, this bill will infuriate you.
The explosive growth of the game led to serious server issues early on, and lag has continued to infuriate top players.
The annual eight-week series of joint exercises performed by the U.S. and South Korean militaries infuriate the North Korean regime.
An Inconvenient Sequel will terrify you, infuriate you, and, hopefully, inspire you to make the world a slightly less terrible place.
All this may infuriate you, or strike you as endearingly odd, but, consider, it could have been so much more distressing.
The move by Democrats is likely to infuriate Republicans, who have objected to efforts to release portions of the panel's interviews.
Moving gun reform legislation, however, would infuriate the powerful gun lobby and could alienate conservatives in battleground districts across the country.
A referendum would resurrect bitter arguments and infuriate Leavers, who see it as a rematch of a contest they already won.
The move led to the appointment of a special counsel in May 2017, a development that continues to infuriate the President.
The organization he created, WikiLeaks, has spilled secrets that infuriate the right and, more recently, the left side of the political aisle.
Democrats believe cutting into it, even indirectly, will infuriate the very people who sent Donald Trump to the White House — the elderly.
Ekurhuleni, South Africa (CNN Business)"Delayed" and "canceled," two words that infuriate and frustrate train commuters on platforms all over the world.
There's a mix-and-match feel to Battlefront II's multiplayer that I think is going to overjoy some fans, and infuriate others.
Ongoing allegations of widespread human rights abuse made by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights continue to infuriate North Korean leadership.
Here are 10 things you should know before going into your next job interview, and some of these things will infuriate you.
Reports of the Cup's treatment were enough to infuriate Ole Peterson, a former silversmith whose family used to work with the Cup.
As in the book, Meg hates how she looks; her wild mane of hair and her thick glasses embarrass and infuriate her.
Either Apple will kill iTunes, which will infuriate the software's loyal fans, or Apple won't kill iTunes, which will annoy the haters.
Cho, also known as Emily Cho, is the second daughter of the Korean Air chairman to infuriate the public with petulant behavior.
Kim "must be facing some internal instability that he would do something to infuriate the Chinese," said Bennett of the Rand Corp.
That would make European and Chinese goods cheaper, but it would also infuriate Washington about manipulations of the euro and the yuan.
The decision not to whip against the package is sure to infuriate some immigrant rights advocates, including those in her own caucus.
Trump could continue the bluster to satisfy the base, but the administration would act lawfully so as not to infuriate the court.
"In fact, Mr. Trump almost compels the press to cover stories that infuriate him by refusing to ignore them himself," he wrote.
"Instead, because I am gay and I take positions that infuriate fundamentalist conservatives, they use my status as an openly gay man."
But Jackson, harping on timeworn hearsay, managed to insult and infuriate James in a wide-ranging interview with Jackie MacMullan of ESPN.
Launch likely to infuriate China The launch comes as China, North Korea's closest international ally, convenes its annual National People's Congress in Beijing.
Like when Harry met Sally, the differences of one partner infuriate, enliven, or otherwise entangle the other into an irresistible 80s rom-com.
It's just about as far removed from a typical Eurovision song as it's possible to get and guaranteed to infuriate every Russian watching.
His exclusion from the race would infuriate his supporters, who battled state troops in the capital Kinshasa after he lost the 2006 election.
Though her decision to acquit will infuriate the state's liberals, voting against Trump would have provoked a sizable backlash from the state's conservatives.
Later, when he becomes president of the United States, you can infuriate housewives across the nation with a dismissive reference to baking cookies.
The big picture: These companies are a leading source of surprise medical bills, which infuriate patients but are profitable for private equity owners.
Ali's great ability was to antagonize, to infuriate; proof of a man's ability to alter the tone of a moment all by himself.
The entitlements that infuriate us most, it seems, involve the sight of other people chasing determinedly after things we'd never dare to pursue.
Such a move would infuriate the opposition and almost certainly lead to violent unrest, says Achille Comoe of Planet Peace, an Ivorian NGO.
It would also infuriate India's rival Pakistan, an ally of China's, which has responded to India's membership bid with one of its own.
Still the move would infuriate bondholders, especially those who paid close to face value for their bonds when they were still rated investment grade.
Visits to the shrine by Japanese political leaders infuriate China and South Korea, which believe Japan has never fully atoned for its wartime aggression.
But the news is sure to infuriate some federal lawmakers, who repeatedly have needled Twitter during the course of their investigation into Russian influence.
As leaders who have talked with the Dalai Lama have discovered, foreign meetings with someone of whom China disapproves can infuriate the Chinese government.
In Britain, linking TTIP and the idea of American firms eventually gaining access to the NHS was enough to infuriate Middle Englanders, say campaigners.
This can also infuriate patients who want to see a specific provider but learn that he or she isn't covered by their health plan.
But it's something that would infuriate conservatives in the conference and talk of its existence in a final bill has faded in recent weeks.
Falcon's candidacy will likely infuriate Maduro's adversaries, many of whom see him as a Trojan horse seeking to help Maduro legitimize a rigged vote.
The opposition has struggled with how to respond, causing self-defeating divisions that infuriate the majority of Venezuelans who want Maduro out of power.
He offered no proof to that effect — the proof doesn't matter, because the perceived offense to American veterans is enough to infuriate his audience.
Any resumption of large military exercises involving the Americans and South Koreans is certain to infuriate North Korean officials, who regularly denounce such operations.
A vote to put Judge Kavanaugh on the bench could infuriate women — the very demographic Republicans were already struggling with in the midterm elections.
Waymo cars need to understand that at the mall garage, driving super slowly and cautiously is going to infuriate drivers used to zooming through.
But progressive Democrats have argued a different case: They fear that failing to impeach Trump could infuriate their base and lower turnout in 2020.
Extending a beloved film franchise is a risk that can either thrill a loyal audience ("The Force Awakens") or infuriate it ("The Phantom Menace").
My purpose is, rather, to identify some salient attributes of the man that both infuriate people and simultaneously make his abrupt removal so scary.
Sources with direct knowledge say that since the earliest days of his presidency, Trump has mused about revoking press credentials for reporters who infuriate him.
It would infuriate some of his most fervent supporters, risk economic turmoil, and violate a campaign promise shortly before he's up for reelection in 2020.
The 5.8-inch screen is beautiful and it doesn't have a notch, so if those notches infuriate you, you'll like the S9's lovely screen.
That would be a decision sure to infuriate the Knicks' fan base, at least some of the players and possibly the owner, James L. Dolan.
Rather, her performance reflects the way the people we love can confound, even infuriate us while at their best as well as at their worst.
If they disown them, however, they will infuriate Trump supporters, many of whom are already hostile to the Washington establishment, including the -GOP-controlled Congress.
The North will do something that it knows will infuriate its enemies, like testing an intercontinental ballistic missile or shelling a South Korean military base.
Mr. Alpert's friendliness toward Castro and many of his policies will no doubt infuriate some viewers (the authoritarian regime's human rights abuses are not addressed).
Though most of today's undergraduates were in elementary school when he was formally retired, the chief has maintained all his power to impassion and infuriate.
Inkjet printers have some impressive features, but the ink cartridges they require infuriate me because it's as if they've been intentionally designed to confuse you.
Sessions recused himself last year from all investigations involving the 2016 election, including the special counsel's probe, a decision that continues to infuriate the President.
Pentagon officials have long favored arming the Y.P.G., a battle-hardened Kurdish militia, but it is sure to infuriate Turkey, which faces a Kurdish insurgency.
That is expected to lead Mr. Trump this summer to impose tariffs on steel imports, yet another action that is sure to infuriate the Chinese.
That would further exacerbate relations between the British and Irish governments, and would infuriate nationalists in Northern Ireland, where anti-London sentiment is running high.
The U.K. government plans to send two "colossal" warships to the South China Sea next year in a "freedom of navigation operation" sure to infuriate Beijing.
Reimposing sanctions on Iran would infuriate the US's allies and deal a serious blow to Iran's economy, and could ultimately inspire Iran to pursue nuclear weapons.
The move, however, could infuriate conservatives in their own ranks and set up a showdown with the House of Representatives, perhaps endangering the entire repeal effort.
The Digital Flight Data Recorder (DFDR) that was recovered and analyzed indicates some very disturbing circumstances here -- ones that should infuriate pilots who fly these planes.
Religious ideology and professions of faith, especially Catholic ones, are lampooned as idiotic and venal, but the satire will likely infuriate traditional believers of any stripe.
But Tsai declined to say whether she would accept an invitation to speak, a move that should it go ahead would be sure to infuriate China.
The 5.8-inch screen is absolutely gorgeous and it doesn't have a notch, so if those notches infuriate you, you'll like the S9's lovely screen.
Which has got to infuriate Trump, because the only whistle he wants blown is the one he uses to summon Mike Pence when he needs him.
It's easy to write off online scams as penny-ante crimes, small-time rip-offs that infuriate and embarrass victims but don't do them serious harm.
"Hunter Biden profited from the proximity to his father and it has to infuriate President Trump that there's no investigation, barely any media coverage," Caputo said.
Come sit with me in the quiet car, where I type this column as gingerly as possible so as not to infuriate my fellow flesh monsters.
The move is likely to infuriate supporters at Napoli, where Sarri spent three seasons and turned them into the team most likely to threaten Juve's dominance.
By now, you may have predicted why I retreated to the ranks of meat-eaters and I know this is going to infuriate any vegans reading.
The greatest warlord in China might just get under the skin of the greatest general in China, and just working together they increasingly infuriate one another.
Then, like clockwork, whoever wins the presidential election fails to deliver, because moving the embassy would infuriate the Palestinians, who also claim Jerusalem as their capital.
Even before Shkreli was asked to respond to a single question, he managed to infuriate the panel of legislators by grinning during an impassioned speech from Rep.
The hasty acquittal will infuriate the progressive base, which will lead to higher Democratic turnout in primaries in the spring and in the general election in November.
The use of the anti-riot law could infuriate activists who have been demanding that the government avoid using the term "riot" to refer to the demonstrations.
It will take radical faith on both sides to trust that most of their opponents actually love America and aren't evil, even if their words infuriate us.
Certain complicated limited-time offerings, such as the infamous Unicorn Frappuccino, infuriate baristas, as they take more time to make, slow down service, and can create bottlenecks.
But critically, if the deadline is extended, it could infuriate not only Trump's base, but several states who have insisted the program come to a quick end.
It would also infuriate India's rival Pakistan, which responded to India's membership bid with one of its own and has the backing of its close ally China.
Even so, the move is sure to infuriate sheriffs in at least some of Alabama's 67 counties, and the governor's order may be tested in the courts.
Doing so would infuriate career national security professionals and disrupt a carefully-honed approach to handling terrorism suspects, said Joshua A. Geltzer, a former Justice Department attorney.
Mr. Rauner, a wealthy businessman and first-time politician, has managed to infuriate Illinois residents and leaders of all political stripes during a tumultuous stretch as governor.
We received dos and don'ts on topics like behavior in the office (how to impress your boss) and etiquette on the street (how not to infuriate locals).
Another angle of the defense is to deny the Holocaust -- a baseless claim that often appears on the Daily Stormer to infuriate Jews and rally Anglin's supporters.
" Abrams wasn't saying what those abilities may be (of course), but he did add that he knew the new elements "will infuriate some people and thrill others.
South Korea plans to resume blasting propaganda across the border to North Korea using loudspeakers on Friday in a move that is sure to infuriate its northern neighbors.
Still, dropping the demand would likely infuriate the other firms in the race: Boeing Co, Airbus SE and Saab AB - and could prompt them to scrap their bids.
"At the end of the day, this will infuriate some segments of society there," Simmons said, referring to the protests that turned deadly along the Israeli-Gaza border.
Stephen K. Bannon, then the president's chief strategist, warned that it would infuriate longtime loyalists of the president and influential conservative senators, such as Tom Cotton of Arkansas.
His constant music and iPhone habit can tip me over the edge; my stockpiles of shoes by the front door and penchant for constantly rearranging furniture infuriate him.
The novel disrespects borders, and that, no doubt, will infuriate those readers who couldn't care less about Mexicans, starving or otherwise, if their legal status is in doubt.
That Congress rejected that suggestion and largely maintained the department's budget has not affected Mr. Tillerson's plans, a fact that is likely to infuriate many on Capitol Hill.
Their concern: that their accounts about the President's temper and work habits will infuriate the President if he gets to read them -- or sees media accounts about them.
"China has to sincerely repent for the June 4 incident and proactively push for democratic reforms," Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council said in a statement likely to infuriate China.
A third theory was that the footage was too risqué and Ms. Monroe wanted to shoot a more demure version, so as not to further infuriate her husband.
" Meyers also made a point to zing President Donald Trump: "A string of three words that could not have been better designed to infuriate our president: Hollywood Foreign Press.
While Republicans many not break against Trump after months of political pressure, he's bound to infuriate his own side even more as the bitter historic pill of impeachment beckons.
Our thought bubble: One thing seems to infuriate Google critics of all political stripes — the company's tendency to respond slowly or not at all to inquiries, complaints and outrage.
Not only did the 56-year-old comedian infuriate both supporters and opponents of the president, but she also lost her job co-hosting CNN's New Year's Eve program.
This violation and the living proof of it infuriate Vivian, of course, and so does Jones's delusional idiocy, doting on the boy and trying to sweet-talk her, too.
Over and over again, with an emphasis bound to infuriate some scientific purists, Dr. Kramer argues that a doctor's instincts should be respected when it comes to patient care.
Even if the White House is not ultimately successful in evading document requests and blocking witnesses, it could significantly delay Congress's investigation — a result that would surely infuriate Democrats.
While GOP leaders face pressure from Democrats to act, they're also being pressed by members to protect them from tough, unpopular votes that could infuriate conservative activists back home.
In Haynes's hands, Dark Waters has gravitas and the ability to infuriate its audience with the near-impossibility of confronting an industry giant on behalf of the ordinary man.
A nuclear review scheduled to be published this week is expected to call for development of low yield nuclear bombs -- a move likely to infuriate China, Russia and Kim.
He warned aides that despite his electoral landslide and congressional majorities, lawmakers would soon resent him for compelling them to cast votes that might infuriate the voters back home.
If they decide the outcome, it will infuriate left wing activists who irrationally object to giving a vote to officials, including those who have been elected by the voters.
Not only is the US economy not nearly as weak as some in Beijing appear to believe, this type of last minute renegotiation seems almost specifically designed to infuriate Trump.
But I will say that the words will likely surprise you — likely infuriate you — and they'll definitely leave you hoping that this isn't the last time we see these girls.
The art piece is meant to instill a sense of wonder and alter humanity's impression of itself, but in reality it's an empty gesture that'll only serve to infuriate astronomers.
Meanwhile in Democratic-run places, lawmakers have some reason to fear that anything short of the relatively permissive approach followed in some states since Roe will infuriate their own activists.
Washington announced sanctions on Kim for the first time on Wednesday, citing "notorious abuses of human rights," a move diplomats say will infuriate Pyongyang, where the leader is considered infallible.
Starting price: $25.2,247 As with many performance car brands, the idea of a Lamborghini SUV may infuriate purists, but demand for the vehicle has been pretty strong, the company said.
It is where we can come together in a communal space to hear ideas that grip us, surprise us — even infuriate us — as we learn of things we didn't know.
With a lineup of talking heads across discipline and party—Michelle Alexander, James Kilgore, Khalil Muhammad, and Angela Davis, to name a few—13th informs as a means to infuriate.
Cindy is on a mission to ensure that her letter to Santa arrives at the North Pole by Christmas, and her cheerful determination only serves to infuriate the Grinch more.
The fact that pilots have died testing his planes, including his own son, doesn't stand in the way of his determination, but it does infuriate his daughter Susan (Ann Todd).
The book will surely infuriate readers on either side of what should be the most urgent question facing the nation today: the vulnerability of our democratic institutions to Russian manipulation.
This approach will likely infuriate some audiences, especially after years of media coverage that portrayed such women as uniquely evil, bloodthirsty extremists, or as brainwashed fetishists hot for jihadi men.
If the vulnerable Democrats support Kavanaugh, they are likely to infuriate their base and could turn off their most die-hard supporters in an election where turnout will be critical.
And trying to live in pursuit of a stress-free state of mind will only continue to infuriate us — and make us feel like we're falling short of an impossible standard.
But there are some caveats: the flowcharts, while intended to make Bandersnatch easier, may infuriate you more as you realize that your choices are merely an illusion...or something like that.
Tellingly, one of the most popular briefs published by the EEF found there was little evidence to support most marking schemes employed by schools, which often infuriate teachers with their pernicketiness.
South Korea also said it would resume propaganda broadcasts by loudspeaker into North Korea from Friday, which is likely to infuriate its isolated rival, in response to its fourth nuclear test.
Since the blocked nomination of Obama's nominee for Scalia's seat, the Senate has been bitterly divided on the issue of nominees, and the new seats are expected to infuriate some liberals.
All the while, she had to retain her position as the biggest and most effective defender of the types of progressive immigration and climate change policies that most infuriate President Trump.
Bloomberg has a path to the nomination, but it is one that will infuriate Bernie's Army, who are still seething that the Democratic National Committee appeared to undermine their man in 2016.
It has long been assumed in Washington that any American move to alter the status quo would so infuriate China that it might wage war on the island, probably dragging in America.
Hot spots are all about quirks, so to cut through the noise, I need a concept silly enough to infuriate your dad—a concept like naming all of our dishes after moods.
And German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble appears to favor stricter budget rules, an idea that would infuriate southern European countries which are struggling to cope with high unemployment after years of austerity.
If Palang Pracharat forms a government — relying largely on its army-installed senate allies — it could infuriate supporters of the anti-junta coalition and undercut the perceived legitimacy of the new government.
Just in the last 24 hours, new White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci has all but accused Priebus of being the source of leaks that damage the administration and infuriate the president.
It remains unclear how far such talks will go in reducing tensions, especially since an official Saudi opening with Iran could infuriate Mr. Trump, who has tried to isolate and punish Iran.
Facing such uncertainties, the world leaders may not be receptive to some of Mr. Obama's urgings, including one for debt relief for Greece, something that would infuriate right-wing populists even more.
However, he did infuriate Trump by publicizing allegations that helped sink Ronny Jackson's nomination at VA Secretary, so he'll have to weather some tough attacks to win a third term this fall.
"Coats appeared to be laughing at the president, playing to his audience of the intellectual elite in a manner that was sure to infuriate Trump," an administration official told the Washington Post.
In a memorable scene, the phrase "agree to disagree" — so often the way out of a conversation between polar opposites — comes to infuriate him; there should be, he says, no disagreement over facts.
If GOP delegates change the rules at the last minute to block his nomination, it will (accurately) appear that they were trying to "steal" the election from Trump, and infuriate his many supporters.
In other words, the measure is likely to infuriate the very protesters most likely to cause disruptions and chaos across Hong Kong, and it also makes their cause look more just, and necessary.
Internet trolls can seem like dark masters of their art, placing a precisely worded (if grammatically awkward) comment meant to infuriate good-hearted online citizens while derailing any kind of a productive conversation.
Such a change would be a major break from longstanding American policy and would infuriate the Palestinians, who want at least part of Jerusalem to be the capital of a future Palestinian state.
Such a move would unleash a fresh constitutional argument and is likely to infuriate the President if the courts, as expected, step in to block his power play, igniting a long legal battle.
With his brash manner and flamboyant personal style — showy haircut, sculpted eyebrows, gold chains — he seems more American than Australian, and his misbehavior and occasional lack of effort infuriate many of his compatriots.
The result is a tax bill from House Republicans that is months late, has something to infuriate nearly everyone, and barely even pretends to offer the long-promised simplification of the tax code.
It would underscore the chaos surrounding Mr. Trump; amount to an acknowledgment that Mr. Kavanaugh is tarnished; and, by bowing to liberals demanding he not be confirmed, infuriate the conservative rank-and-file.
As a Red Cross volunteer in Belgium, he paints what he sees in the field hospitals—masked doctors, men with gangrene—and these images infuriate Elinor, who accuses Paul of "using" the men.
Hong Kong (CNN Business)Asian markets retreated after US President Donald Trump signed a bill supporting Hong Kong protesters, a move that could potentially infuriate Beijing and complicate the US-China trade talks.
A victory for Ms Tsai and her independence-leaning party would infuriate Mr Xi, who sets great store by the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation"—meaning, among other things, reunification with Taiwan.
Politics can change quickly, and Trump picked a strange time to infuriate his allies by rescinding support for Kurds in Syria, but it'll take several seismic unforeseeable events for the dynamic to change.
He also hailed the success of Iranian allies across the region, including Lebanon's Hezbollah, in remarks likely to infuriate Tehran's main regional foe Saudi Arabia, lauding a "resistance line" from Tehran to Beirut.
Trump's conversation with Tsai was the first such contact with Taiwan by a president-elect or president since President Jimmy Carter adopted a one-China policy in 1979 and is likely to infuriate Beijing.
Instead, Trump and his aides continue to baffle and infuriate even many Republicans by opposing new sanctions on Russia and publicly arguing that they see Russia as an ally in the fight against ISIS.
Read these stories next:This Salon's Policy Toward "Overweight" Customers Will Infuriate You I Got A Pinterest Haircut — & It Did Not Go According To Plan Meet The At-Home Treatment That Actually Repairs Your Hair
Tehran, Iran (CNN)Iran's Revolutionary Guards say Saudi Arabia supported ISIS in the deadly twin attacks in Tehran on Wednesday, an accusation likely to infuriate the Saudi kingdom amid high tensions in the region.
The annual exercises always infuriate Pyongyang, and some have called for them to be called off or scaled back as a show of good faith that might bring Kim back to the negotiating table.
It's an attempt at a compromise that's sure to infuriate Pai's critics, including the Internet Association, a Washington, D.C-based group that lobbies on behalf of Amazon, Facebook, Google, Twitter and other web giants.
While the move would infuriate Kiev and European allies, Trump may have already signaled that he is inclined to grant Moscow this win: a Buzzfeed article citing unnamed diplomatic sources alludes to this possibility.
The terrain they have chosen, the country's heavily used rail network, has the potential to either make the president buckle by crippling France's economy or infuriate its citizens and turn them against the unions.
ROME (Reuters) - The Roman Catholic archbishop of Taiwan said on Thursday that he will invite Pope Francis to visit the country for a Church congress next year, a trip that would likely infuriate China.
It appears that the main thing that Canada did to infuriate Trump was follow through on its promise to impose tariffs against the US in response to new US tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum.
And the penalty itself could be especially severe: In addition to tariffs, the Trump administration could impose tight restrictions that bar China from making investments in the US market, a move that would infuriate Beijing.
The new Times report, though, will undoubtedly infuriate the president — and could well provide him with the pretext he's long sought to justify Rosenstein's firing, and provoke a showdown over the future of Mueller's probe.
Wordplay THURSDAY PUZZLE — There are few things that infuriate solvers more than a rebus theme, but I think I could safely say that having to write backward in a grid is pretty high up there.
And yet, here we are again, writing about the encryption debate because the Trump administration has drawn up yet another cynical, misleading example to infuriate us and anyone who cares or knows anything about cybersecurity.
Those demand leakages drove up the last year's trade deficit by 7.7 percent to $810 billion — an event that should infuriate the president who promised to stop, and reverse, such a worsening decades-old trend.
If they did, it could infuriate House GOP conservatives who don't want to have to vote against spending increases for the military that they support in order to vote against an immigration deal they abhor.
Mr. Cuomo threw down the gauntlet in a speech in Manhattan, pressuring state lawmakers who are reluctant to support his proposal with the idea of a staggering fare increase that would undoubtedly infuriate transit riders.
ISTANBUL/BERLIN (Reuters) - Tayyip Erdogan's portrayal of a Germany mired in its Nazi past was calculated to infuriate Berlin while swaying Turks at home and abroad to vote "yes" to sweeping new presidential powers he seeks.
Josh Blackman of the South Texas College of Law says only one outcome is certain: the swing justice, who found himself in the majority 98% of the time last term, "will continue to infuriate both sides".
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (CNN)Four Arab states that have boycotted Qatar have handed the country a list of 13 demands, including some likely to infuriate Doha and exacerbate the region's worst crisis in decades.
But some Intelligence Committee lawmakers warned Tuesday that they believe the DOJ will only offer to brief them on the materials under subpoena by Nunes, an outcome nearly certain to infuriate conservative allies of the president.
However, if one were to select the member of the White House best suited to negotiate change in a fashion that would not infuriate the country's allies and trade partners, Cohn would have been that person.
This means the central government in Beijing has a pretty strong incentive to make sure it's not perceived as persecuting Muslims all over China, as that would almost certainly infuriate many of its Islamic partner nations.
Tiebreaks will continue to infuriate sports fans who believe they deny teams a well-earned victory, or who believe in the honourable draw, or who resent seeing one player forced to take responsibility for an overall result.
If Trump is deprived of this majority, a contested convention that hands the nomination to someone else is a possibility — though such a move by GOP elites would surely be immensely controversial and infuriate Trump's many supporters.
It's RINOs that infuriate him and the rest of the Central Committee leadership, especially when, as he sees it, they aim to interfere with the way of life the Redoubt is trying to preserve in North Idaho.
One of my neighbors loves to steal things when people aren't looking; another refuses to sleep in her own bed and will infuriate others in doing so, leaving them to yell, pout, and sleep on the couch.
Get the Emoji Rubik's cube for $8 See Details As if Uno didn't already infuriate enough players, imagine what it must be like for the dreaded Draw-4 card to be sticking its tongue out at you.
But LeRoy's story, in large part thanks to Jeff Feuerzeig's excellent documentary Author: The JT LeRoy Story, which came out on Friday, continues to fascinate and to infuriate many who were tricked by Albert and her comrades.
What will likely infuriate some of these immigration hard-liners is that a few of the migrants apprehended in the truck could, as a result of their harrowing experience, be eligible for a chance to stay here.
That episode was particularly damaging to Mr. Pence, who had been discussed as a possible presidential candidate but who managed to infuriate both political opponents and members of his own party with his handling of the bill.
The very idea of the Libya model of abandoning nuclear weapons in exchange for aid is known to infuriate officials in Pyongyang, who believe that the deal paved the way for Gaddafi's overthrow and murder in 2011.
Why it matters: This is the third time that the White House has directed a Republican senator to block the resolution, a symbolic measure already passed by the House that would infuriate Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
The Southern Poverty Law Center has identified memes featuring the hoax religion of Kek and the cartoon character Pepe the Frog, among others, as being at the forefront of white nationalists' efforts to distract and infuriate liberals.
ISTANBUL/BERLIN, March 6 (Reuters) - Tayyip Erdogan's portrayal of a Germany mired in its Nazi past was calculated to infuriate Berlin while swaying Turks at home and abroad to vote "yes" to sweeping new presidential powers he seeks.
It doesn't want to risk that advantage with a military offensive in Idlib that would infuriate Ankara Syria and Iran, however, "strongly want to go in and launch an offensive operation to recapture the area," Kozak told Axios.
Although it is not clear if the Trump transition team intended the conversation to signal a broader change in US policy towards Taiwan, the call is likely to infuriate Beijing which regards the island as a renegade province.
Mnuchin's letter is sure to infuriate Democrats who originally tried to get Trump's tax returns in April by directing their request to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig, the only person with the legal authority to turn over tax returns.
The Senate's 98-2 passage of the sanctions bill, which followed a 419-3 vote in the House of Representatives, forces Trump to take a hard line on Moscow or veto the legislation and infuriate his fellow Republicans.
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Yanto Awerkion knew quite well that he would infuriate the local Indonesian authorities for organizing a meeting to discuss a petition for an independence referendum in the strife-torn Papua region — but he did it anyway.
And the Commerce Department is expected this week to release its report on whether foreign steel imports threaten U.S. security, which could lead to higher tariffs on imported steel, an action that is likely to infuriate the Chinese.
Ultimately, the popular vote and delegate counts split, with Bernie Sanders taking the former and Buttigieg the latter (pending a Sanders-requested recanvass), as if the affair had been scripted to infuriate Sanders's most fervent and conspiratorial supporters.
"Once you get to February or March, it's unlikely you don't have a forever CR." Many Republicans also oppose a full-year punt, which would infuriate Pentagon officials who have warned that doing so would hurt military preparedness.
Such comments, which mirror accusations Riyadh makes about Iran, infuriate Saudi officials who regard Rouhani as a smooth-talking cipher for Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and see no point engaging with him instead of his harder line superior.
The annual exercises always infuriate Pyongyang, and some have called for them to be called off or scaled back as a show of good faith that might bring North Korean leader Kim Jong Un back to the negotiating table.
At its recent congress some delegates said the DPP should drop its call for an independent Taiwan (which would please China), while others called for Taiwan's official name, the Republic of China, to be abolished (which would infuriate it).
This can infuriate at first, as you curse its inability to save you from a do-or-die leap, but I soon came around to the understanding that I am not its master, and it is not my pet.
That idea will further infuriate Berlin and the Central Europeans, in part because no one believes that France's nuclear deterrent is capable of covering the Continent, and the British nuclear deterrent is almost entirely dependent on American nuclear missiles.
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese hardliners have parts of their brains missing, exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama said in an interview aired this week, comments likely to infuriate Beijing, which views the Nobel Peace laureate as a dangerous separatist.
This is the first time that the authorities in the financial hub have resorted to using the rioting charge, and it could infuriate activists who have been demanding that the government avoid using the term "riot" to refer to the demonstrations.
Absolutely. Here's the deal with us: I've answered a lot of questions and everyone has been telling us for the longest time that we can't do things, but when people say that to me, all it does is infuriate me.
That would deny Islamic State access to the outside world, but would infuriate Turkey, which regards the border as the main access route for other Sunni Muslim rebel groups it supports against Assad, and for aid to civilians in rebel areas.
Japan is due to switch on a new radar observation station in the East China Sea on Monday, a move that will likely infuriate Beijing and mark the latest escalation in the long-simmering dispute between the two Asian heavyweights.
The blast near a university campus comes a week after deadly twin bombings targeted police in Istanbul and may further infuriate a public smarting from multiple attacks by Islamic and Kurdish militants this year, and a failed coup in July.
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea on Tuesday displayed some of its newly purchased US-made F-35 stealth fighter jets for the first time during its Armed Forces Day ceremony, a development that will likely infuriate rival North Korea.
Trump has continued to stun fellow Republicans and infuriate many members of the nation's intelligence community by publicly disregarding the mounting evidence that Putin interfered in the US presidential election with the aim of helping Trump win the White House.
In an announcement that will infuriate Israel and could have far-reaching international consequences, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court announced today that there is a basis for opening an investigation regarding the situation in the occupied Palestinian territories.
J.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas) to pass the resolution were blocked by Republican senators at the request of the White House, which feared that its passage would infuriate the Turkish government during a tense period of U.S.-Turkey relations. Sens.
Joint US-South Korea military drills -- which always infuriate Pyongyang and raise tensions on the peninsula -- have been suspended for the duration of the upcoming Olympics as a show of good faith, but they are likely resume following the competition.
If Kavanaugh withdraws or loses, Republicans would likely try to push through another Supreme Court nominee during a lame-duck session, a move that would infuriate Democrats still furious over McConnell's decision to block Merrick Garland's nomination to the court.
While George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and other presidents all used the constitutional power of mercy to benefit their political allies from time to time, Trump almost exclusively uses pardons to favor his supporters and infuriate his adversaries, not to alleviate injustices.
It's the kind of clip that can easily infuriate and crush a black elder or parent—knowing there's nothing you can do to shield an elementary school-age child from being exposed to this reality and needing to be this emotionally sophisticated.
Among other things, the Breitbart tech editor has: As a result, Yiannopoulos has become an icon of the internet right, one of Donald Trump's most enthusiastic online boosters, and went on a "Dangerous Faggot" speaking tour on college campuses designed to infuriate leftists.
Love for Sanders Sanders' own whip-smart political instincts and tendency to visibly infuriate reporters with her brassiness and non-answers during the briefings play into the administration's contention that it is the victim of an orchestrated campaign of unfair press coverage.
This starkly honest approach to an already difficult subject raises an important question: How do you tell a story like Marie's in a way that will infuriate viewers, but not anger them so much that you irreparably turn them off the show?
This complaint seemed to infuriate the justices, who ruled unanimously that no credible reading of the court's past rulings would support such an outcome, and that the towns were still "constitutionally obligated" to provide a fair share of the affordable housing need.
The documents reportedly include a detailed outline for a strike to take out Kim – plans that are likely to infuriate the North Korean leader, given his reaction to the 2014 Seth Rogen movie that centered on a fictional assassination plot against Kim.
While this may infuriate mental health advocates, who will argue that such a policy will only add stigma to those affected, we can no longer stick our heads in the collective sand and allow guns into the hands of those unqualified to handle them properly.
For one thing—especially if we're going by the headlines that infuriate us the most—their ideas seem to literally threaten the end of humanity and decency as we know it; for another, they seem to be working with a completely different set of facts.
Rumors also say Apple will remove the SD card slot from the MacBook Pros — which will surely infuriate photographers and other people who use that slot for work — and the company will probably cut the MagSafe charger you're familiar with in favor of USB-C.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate voted almost unanimously on Thursday to slap new sanctions on Russia, putting President Donald Trump in a tough position by forcing him to take a hard line on Moscow or veto the legislation and infuriate his own Republican Party.
But most likely Trump's publicity successes will thrill his fans and infuriate his foes (which will only thrill his fans more), right up until the moment disaster strikes — at which point we'll all remember that showmanship isn't really the most important part of the job.
His promotion is sure to infuriate Democrats who have called on HUD to fire Blankenstein because he once questioned the legitimacy of hate crimes and whether using the N-word is inherently racist in old blog posts uncovered by The Washington Post last year. Sens.
It's been four long years since Allison Williams first introduced the world to Hannah Horvath's best friend Marnie and proceeded to alternately entertain and infuriate fans with her blind optimism, too real for comfort singing career, and on-again, off-again twee romance with her bandmate.
He also highlighted the activists present as guests to highlight the work of the Time's Up movement, and even threw in some Trump humor to ground us ("The Hollywood Foreign Press; a string of three words that could not have been better designed to infuriate our president").
Not only did the task force manage to infuriate the many U.S. government organizations trying to track money laundering, it exposed Mexican and Colombian cartels like Norte del Valle—along with pretty much every law firm left in Florida that would have been willing to represent them.
One possibility is that the original leaked order was the handiwork of Mike Pence, the pious vice president, and that Ivanka Trump, the president's daughter, prevailed on him to steer clear of a move that would infuriate the gay and lesbian community and gay-friendly millennials.
The move is likely to infuriate the powerful corn lobby and top officials in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, who have complained for months that an expansion of the EPA's refinery waiver program under the Trump administration threatens demand for crucial farm products like corn-based ethanol.
He then said that he was open to Janet Yellen serving another term as Federal Reserve chair, despite having railed against her constantly on the campaign trail—this will clearly infuriate all of those who voted for him because of their deep hatred of Janet Yellen!
All told, bringing these individuals to Guantanamo would inject uncertainty into their fate, impose costs and tough legal challenges on our government, and infuriate our anti-Guantanamo British allies whose citizens also appear to have died at their hands -- all with the possibility of eventual release.
There have been thousands of pop-psychology attempts to explain why "young women taking selfies," and it seems to infuriate men so much—it perennially feels like Piers Morgan is telling Kim Kardashian to "put it away"—but surely some small part of it must be jealousy.
One group will be particularly well positioned to either accommodate or infuriate Donald J. Trump: a handful of independent-minded Republican senators who have shown a willingness to break with the president-elect and have readily split with their own party on issues in the past.
Bannon was also quoted in the book as saying Mueller would eventually reach Trump by probing the financial dealings of Kushner and Donald Jr. -- another quote that may infuriate Trump, as he has suggested the special counsel would cross a red line by delving into his finances.
Trump also belittled North Korean strongman Kim Jong Un as "Rocket Man," a petty insult likely to infuriate the notoriously thin-skinned dictator Hours before Ri's speech on Saturday, Trump sent US bombers to fly in international waters along the North Korean coast in a provocative show of force.
Were we to be more laid back, less inclined to jump every time he rattles his saber, in the short term it might infuriate him, encourage some new act of brinkmanship, although he has few safe options now and faces powerful states and alliances alert to his usual tricks.
LIMA (Reuters) - The frontrunner to win Peru's presidential election next month, Keiko Fujimori, has been given the go-ahead to stay in the race after vote-buying accusations were rejected by a court, a decision that will likely infuriate opponents and do little to calm a hotly disputed contest.
Both men, for instance, agreed that the Trump administration should certify that Tehran is complying with the Iran nuclear deal – a pivotal decision that Trump resisted last month despite concerns that not issuing the certification would infuriate US allies and forfeit all current restrictions on Iran's nuclear program.
Read: Meet the men fighting ISIS with hunting rifles The United States has been wary of arming the YPG directly, preferring to say that its ammunition drops are for a broader coalition of Arab factions so as not to infuriate Turkey, which regards the YPG as a terrorist group.
Even BuzzFeed quizzes demand some semblance of effort: A handful of questions await your honest answers to various inquiries about your interests and tastes that, in exchange for providing the website with valuable demographic information, result in a pseudo-scientific response that will either enthrall or infuriate you.
Politically, it seems to embody the worst of both worlds: It's enough like Obamacare to infuriate hard-line conservatives, but it weakens key aspects of the law enough to deprive millions of Americans — many of them white working-class voters who backed Donald Trump — of essential health care.
"To infuriate and terrorise the infidels, we renew our pledge of loyalty to the commander of the faithful and the caliph of the Muslims, the mujahid sheikh Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi al-Hussaini al-Qurashi may god preserve him," militants said in a statement posted on their social media groups.
May, Mr. Corbyn, Mr. Johnson or anyone else, will still be faced with finding a way either to put in place a messy divorce that would infuriate a major portion of the nation, or abandoning the process, staying in the European Union and infuriating a different portion of the population.
Sometimes we are not treated like that — when supposedly non-partisan organizations put the interests of the Republican Party above the interests of the pro-life movement, or when we infuriate those who seem to care more about unfettered free markets than about protecting unborn lives by vocally supporting health-care for all.
The United States should help, not by unilaterally siding with "the Kurds" against Turkey, which will only further infuriate the latter, but by doing what the Obama administration should have done four years ago: Understand Ankara's concerns, mediate between the two sides and broker a peaceful deal, an option President Trump suggested Wednesday.
That group may soon include Andre Marriner, the man who earned Pep Guardiola's fury for failing to give Manchester City a penalty against Tottenham on Saturday, and Jon Moss, who managed to infuriate evenhandedly by awarding injury-time penalties to both teams in Arsenal's dramatic 2-1 win over Burnley on Sunday.
Several officials have quietly expressed concern about the duration of the President's visit, reasoning that the longer he spends in the Florida sun, the more opportunity outsiders will have to influence him or for news coverage to infuriate him, as has happened over and over during his stays at the private club.
Despite the fact that Obama was again weak about Russia in his Friday press conference — which will further infuriate many Democrats over his inadequate response to Russia — and despite the fact that Obama shamefully continues to refuse to order an intelligence briefing for the electors, which was repeated on Friday, the electors should demand it.
It is sure to infuriate many members of her Conservative Party, most of whom support leaving the European Union with no deal if necessary, and to reaffirm the cynicism, rampant among many of the 17.4 million Britons who voted to leave, that the elites in London would never let them have their way. Mrs.
Liberals and leftists still battle with conservatives over most of the other big issues that roiled the nation back then: affirmative action, the right to abortion, freedom for gays and lesbians, curbs on corporate power, environmental protection, the politics of academia — and rulings by the Supreme Court that cheer one camp and infuriate the other.
Rather than infuriate with the maze, though, Tin Man warrants a comparable level of player ire (from this player, at least) with a grid-based combat system that is about as clear to comprehend as a Haynes manual written in a language you're not fluent in, that's been left in a nasty old oil tank for three years.
There's nothing so inherently evil to be found in Hue (by Fiddlesticks); but the puzzle side of this puzzle-platformer, which I also gave the merest of shout-outs in that other piece, is expertly engineered to infuriate for just long enough until—click—everything slides into position and you, Hue, escape the room in question.
The city's Department of Transportation is well aware that cutting the number of precious parking spots — even in a city with millions of spaces — will infuriate drivers, some of whom already see the agency as bent on banishing cars as the city continues to install miles of bike lanes and turn parts of thoroughfares into pedestrian plazas.
Any shift away from regular order would infuriate conservative Republicans, who had ousted Ryan's predecessor, John BoehnerJohn Andrew BoehnerLobbyists race to cash in on cannabis boom Rising star Ratcliffe faces battle to become Trump's intel chief This little engine delivers results for DC children MORE (R-Ohio), largely because they felt he rigged the rules at the expense of their powers to influence legislation. Rep.
In the post, we quote a New Yorker article, "The Six Things That Make Stories Go Viral Will Amaze, and Maybe Infuriate, You," that explains the strategies in a way that students may readily understand: In 350 B.C., Aristotle was already wondering what could make content — in his case, a speech — persuasive and memorable, so that its ideas would pass from person to person.
Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper and General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, conveyed to the president that if he followed up that tweet with a direct order, there would be huge consequences: Mr. Trump would lose Mr. Spencer and Admiral Green, further infuriate his top military leadership and do untold damage to decades of military justice doctrine, according to administration officials.
Or perhaps you remember what was then a new experience and is now a familiar one: the dawning realization that all of it — the news conference and the late-night skits alike — existed for an audience of one man, to soothe or infuriate a consciousness that, it was fast becoming clear, was mostly mediated by the flickering screen in the dining room adjoining the Oval Office.
There was no reason, after all, to infuriate the Palestinians and roil the rest of the Middle East with an inflammatory move that was sure to instigate controversy over a sensitive final-status issue, one of the key matters needed to be resolved to end the conflict, just as he was embarking on an uphill quest to succeed where his predecessors failed and rescue the moribund peace process.
The seemingly coordinated investigations — which were announced within a half-hour of each other — is sure to fire up the conservative base and infuriate Democrats who want House investigators to more rigorously probe Russian efforts to meddle in the 2016 election in favor of Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE.
The transition win for May comes at the expense of having agreed to a "backstop" solution on the Irish border that, if implemented, could infuriate many of her political allies as it could effectively isolate the Northern Ireland economy from mainland Britain by keeping its regulations in line with the EU. Both sides say they do not want to go back to border checks between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland - as was the case during decades of violence in the British province.

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