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27 Sentences With "more pugnacious"

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

Pressuring him to step aside will only make him more pugnacious.
I would say right now that he's being more pugnacious than effective.
I would say right now he is being more pugnacious than effective.
But now, ironically, Mattis has to contend with an even more pugnacious rival in the White House.
It is not clear how well that approach will work with China, a much bigger and more pugnacious trading partner.
The campaign stage didn't suit the low-key congressman, who struggled to defend his fiscal analysis when faced with more pugnacious scrutiny.
As political donors and primary voters have become more pugnacious, they expect politicians they back to fight harder, says David Gamage at Indiana University.
"I would say right now that he's being more pugnacious than effective," Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker, told the radio host Laura Ingraham.
And as he got older, ever more pugnacious, he harbored an increasing disdain for Charles Darwin, distinct from but alongside his disdain for molecular biology.
A steady earnestness has served Pichai well in the past, but managing all the controversies now swirling around his company may require a more pugnacious approach.
Unlike some retired Chinese diplomats, he did not comment publicly as his country's foreign policy grew more pugnacious in recent years, especially under President Xi Jinping.
And DHS may soon be poised to get a more pugnacious leader on the subject, increasing the chance that the agency asserts itself more on topics like border crossings.
But Hollande, who was more pugnacious and confident than in a TV interview earlier this year which had unanimously been judged as poor by commentators, said his reforms were working.
Partisans were split on the subject of relations with China, with 21625 percent of Republicans favoring more pugnacious relations toward the country in comparison to just 2900 percent of Democrats.
Clinton's critics may needle her for "shouting," but they probably wouldn't even know how to handle a genuinely angry, shouting outburst from Clinton of the kind that the more pugnacious Trump unleashed several times during the debate.
The pharma defendants took a more pugnacious stance, asserting that just days after the 6th Circuit called for disclosure of the ARCOS data, the Supreme Court, in its Argus Leader decision, rejected the analysis the 6th Circuit relied upon.
Lower-tier candidates looking to energize their campaigns have also been more pugnacious: Representative Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, for instance, has amped up her criticisms of the Democratic National Committee, the news media and even Hillary Clinton, who is not in the race.
But don't let it sidetrack you from Pape's more pugnacious work with the camera, from her Super 8 footage shot in a favela on the sea to her documentary "A Mão do Povo" ("The Hand of the People"), from 1975, which contrasts indigenous Brazilian art and handicraft with consumerist junk in Brazil's big cities.
The Sich. Taras successfully encourages the idle residents to rouse themselves for battle. Andriy and Ostap look forward to this; when Andriy has brief forebodings, Ostap promises always to support him. Drumbeats summon a council (rada) of the Cossacks; with Taras's support, they elect a new, more pugnacious hetman, Kyrdiaha, to lead them.
Wolff was also continuing to attract important writers as contributors for the Tageblatt. In 1926 he persuaded the pugnaciously liberal journalist-lawyer Rudolf Olden"He was a German Liberal of the best sort, rather more pugnacious than the average British Liberal, because he had more to fight against." – Gilbert Murray on Rudolf Olden: Foreword to The History of Liberty in Germany, 1946. to move his base from Vienna to Berlin.
On 18 June, William withdrew his forces. The flooding was not ready yet, only having been ordered on 8 June, and the countryside of Holland was basically defenceless against the French. On 19 June, the French took the fortress of Naarden close to Amsterdam. In a defeatist mood a divided States of Holland – Amsterdam was more pugnacious – sent a delegation to de Louvois in Zeist to ask for peace terms, headed by Pieter de Groot.
Impressed, Honda took Hirotoshi's idea and made a production version, introduced in September 1982. A few months earlier, Honda staffers took two City Turbos on a gruelling 10,000 km round trip of Europe, all the way from Sicily to Karasjok in the arctic north. Honda City Turbo II In November 1983, the intercooled Turbo II joined the lineup. Flared fenders, wings, side-skirts and graphics combined for a much more pugnacious appearance, making its "Bulldog" nickname very fitting.
Both Count Tisza and General Conrad von Hötzendorf expressed a preference for the latter.Stephen Pope & Elizabeth-Anne Wheal, The Macmillan Dictionary of the First World War, London, Macmillan, 1995, p. 68. Under mounting German pressure, Count Berchtold, however, indicated that he was ready to cede the Trentino and parts of the Albanian coastline. When he informed Tisza and Conrad of the concessions he was ready to give, they forced him to resign on 13 January 1915. At Count Tisza’s insistence he was replaced by the more pugnacious Count Burián.
Foreign intellectuals who visited London identified the incongruous fusion of the statue and the arch as 'spectacular confirmation' of the 'artistic ignorance of the English'. Architectural historian Guy Williams writes that "[the] arch at Hyde Park Corner is a visible reminder of one of the fiercest attacks that have ever been launched in the worlds of art and architecture. The face of London might have been very different now – freer, perhaps, of the 'monstrous carbuncles' so disliked by the present Prince of Wales – if the attacked party [Decimus Burton] had been a little more pugnacious, and so better equipped to stand his ground". Marble Arch before its relocation at the entrance to the newly rebuilt Buckingham Palace Aerial view of Marble Arch In 1847 the problem of accommodating Queen Victoria's expanding family was becoming acute.
Foreign intellectuals who visited London identified the incongruous fusion of the statue and the arch as 'spectacular confirmation' of the 'artistic ignorance of the English'. Architectural historian Guy Williams writes that "[the] arch at Hyde Park Corner is a visible reminder of one of the fiercest attacks that have ever been launched in the worlds of art and architecture. The face of London might have been very different now - freer, perhaps, of the 'monstrous carbuncles' so disliked by the present Prince of Wales - if the attacked party [Decimus Burton] had been a little more pugnacious, and so better equipped to stand his ground". During 1882, traffic congestion at Hyde Park Corner motivated advocacy for Burton's triumphal arch to be moved to the top of Constitution Hill to create space for traffic.
Lycett Green grew more pugnacious throughout the discussions, and threatened to accuse Gordon-Cumming in public at the races the following day; he also stated that, "I will not be a party to letting Gordon-Cumming prey on society in future". The men decided that Gordon-Cumming should sign a document admitting his guilt in exchange for their silence, and Williams and Coventry went to Edward to inform him of what had been happening. The two men told the prince that "the evidence they had heard was absolutely conclusive and they did not believe Sir William Gordon-Cumming had a leg to stand on". The prince believed what he had been told by his courtiers, and also assumed that cheating had taken place; he later said that with accusations from five witnesses he believed the worst of his friend straight away.
His reputation has increased since the commencement of the 20th century, during which a Burtons' St Leonards Society has been founded in St Leonards-on-Sea to 'encourage the preservation of the work of James and Decimus Burton and to prevent development unsympathetic to its character', which has successfully thwarted several attempts to create new developments that would have violated the beauty of the Burtons' project. Architectural historian Guy Williams writes that "[the] arch at Hyde Park Corner is a visible reminder of one of the fiercest attacks [on Decimus Burton and neoclassicism, by Augustus Pugin] that have ever been launched in the worlds of art and architecture. The face of London might have been very different now – freer, perhaps, of the 'monstrous carbuncles' so disliked by the present Prince of Wales – if the attacked party [Decimus Burton] had been a little more pugnacious, and so better equipped to stand his ground". The recently completed restoration (2018) of the Temperate House at London's Kew Gardens has prompted a re-evaluation of Burton's horticultural designs.

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