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83 Sentences With "rived"

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

Nothing can unite this rived country, but that could rebuild it.
Washington's clubby diplomatic and lobbying worlds have been rived by the Khashoggi case.
Rived by years of infighting, Australia's conservative governing coalition was trailing in the polls.
Congress, rived by partisan dissension, is still haggling over the terms of a rescue bill.
By the time of the decisive second-round runoff in May, the country was deeply rived.
As "Henry IV" begins, his anxiety has been borne out, with the country again rived by conflict.
Debates over day laborers, some of them illegal immigrants, have rived towns and villages throughout the island.
Her scalding accusations against a man about to ascend to the Supreme Court riveted a rived nation.
The red, dusty landscape that surrounds his house and studio is rived by a dry creek bed.
The episodic narrative tracks Gloria over a period rived by minor as well as life-altering change.
The first is the traditional socialist story associated with Bernie Sanders: America is rived by the class conflict.
If the party wins, she will capture a fourth term, running a country increasingly rived by populism and xenophobia.
And the Sacramento Kings — well, at least the Kings are still the Kings, reportedly rived by front-office drama.
But on the issues that have rived Washington during Mr. Trump's turbulent presidency, he did not give an inch.
They argue that it's a worrisome case of official partisanship in a part of the world rived by religious conflicts.
Where Detroit conflates truth and power with "unflinching" looks at the riots that rived the city for days, Whose Streets?
That's because it is unique in another way: it's the first to erupt in an area rived by gun battles.
The alt-right movement, never very well unified, has been particularly rived by infighting and schisms in the last year.
Labour continues to be rived by opposing factions over how openly to campaign for reversing Brexit, frustrating pro-Europe voters.
The proceedings commencing on Thursday will play out in a Capitol already rived by politics during a contentious election year.
This is coming at a time when Prime Minister Theresa May's government is deeply unpopular and rived by its own divisions.
Germany, the world's fourth-largest economy and Europe's richest country, is a prosperous place — but one rived by inequality and social injustice.
Then there are those who grumble that, for a conservative institution rived by mutually hating factions, it is merely business as usual.
But party elders are dubious that Mr. Espy can stitch together a state still rived by cultural, political, economic — and racial — divides.
Zakia and Ali, the journalist Rod Nordland's Afghan Romeo and Juliet, are Tajik and Hazara, Sunni and Shia, disparate ethnicities and rived sects.
It is rived with fault lines, foremost among them the many ways American society itself threatens the wholeness of all families, especially black ones.
Rived by caste as well as class divisions, and dominated in Bollywood as well as politics by dynasties, India is a grotesquely unequal society.
Sudan is so rived by the conflict that news of these atrocities in the Nuba Mountains, Darfur and Blue Nile rarely reaches Sudan's capital, Khartoum.
But it also looked forward, to a century in which questions of self-determination were more complicated — international in scope and rived with conflicting interests.
Until Thursday, she had proved adept at navigating the complexities of a caucus rived by powerful progressive and moderate factions that often work at cross purposes.
Romeo's dreams for Eliza are rived with contradiction: He wants her to be free, but never imagined that she would want to free herself from him.
Abroad in America Staunch in its opposition to the Democrats but rived by fierce internal schisms, the American political party stumbled toward defeat, its members cursing their fate.
This purple state, which voted for Barack Obama but also helped seal Donald J. Trump's electoral win in 2016, has been rived by partisan fighting in recent years.
"Step" manages to tell both stories in under 90 minutes, with a city rived by the death of Freddie Gray while in police custody as its fraught backdrop.
Now, said Mr. Smith, a former speechwriter for President George Bush, the events are rived by "the extraordinary partisanship on both sides, the zealotry, the hatred" that has evolved.
Its epicenter is a conflict zone rived with so much fighting that medical charities and governments trying to help have had to withdraw, sometimes with casualties of their own.
The law has been divisive in France, which has long been rived by tensions between its Muslim population, Europe's largest, and those who support the state ideology of secularism.
Rived by political violence for its entire existence, the empire had long resisted democratization and had institutionalized differences based on identity between its subjects as a matter of policy.
A frustrated Mr. Tillerson said he had set aside the matter, but Mr. Kushner's wading into the issue could cause tensions in an administration already rived by internal disputes.
Isolated regionally, rived by internal disputes, it had been unable to ameliorate a deepening humanitarian crisis in Gaza and was increasingly humiliated by the failure of reconciliation talks with Ramallah.
Around Justice Kavanaugh was a vivid tableau of Mr. Trump's Washington, a city rived by the battle over the Supreme Court and shadowed by questions about the rule of law.
But over the past five years, his bloc, the Bharatiya Janata Party, or B.J.P., has been spreading an us-versus-them philosophy in a country already rived by dangerous divisions.
" In the book, "Osnos paints a China rived by moral crisis and explosive frustration, whose citizens are desperate to achieve wealth, even as they are terrified of being left with nothing.
Its deep view of a rived terrain in browns and shadowy blacks is relieved by an interval of sun-dappled clouds and scattered rain showers, culminating in a band of leaden sky.
Increasingly I find myself wondering at the nature of the story it has made up: rived with contradictions and inconsistencies and problems of point of view, its relationship to the truth opaque.
Ministers have so far ruled out that possibility, but the governing party is rived by dissent, with a radical grouping arguing that the government should "fall heroically" rather than enforce the austerity measures.
On Tuesday, it will try again, hearing arguments in a case involving the Wisconsin State Assembly that could remake an American political landscape rived by polarization and increasingly fenced off for partisan advantage.
The board itself has been rived with discord, especially between Mr. Kalanick and Benchmark, a venture capital firm that is a major Uber shareholder and that also has a seat on Uber's board.
But in drawing attention to an option that isn't strictly legal, they have touched on tensions at the heart of an abortion rights movement increasingly rived by what some say are competing aims.
Another way to put it is that Britain has become even more rived by divisions over Europe than it was before the referendum that was meant to end them once and for all.
Thailand has been rived by political schisms for nearly two decades, and members of the royal family, although considered to be above the cut and thrust of politics, have been drawn into the disorder.
Two West Wing advisers and a third person painted a picture of a White House staff rived and confused, with fingers pointed in all directions and the president privately expressing dissatisfaction with Mr. Kelly.
Over time, the Gulenists and the A.K. Party were rived by policy disputes — the peace process with the P.K.K., for example, and above all the financial-corruption cases that Gulenist prosecutors brought against Erdogan.
But Germany may not have the luxury of time to reconcile its contradictory feelings about its place in the world, especially with an intransigent America and resurgent Russia, and a Europe rived by populism.
There were also designers like Lucas Ossendrijver at Lanvin, who last Sunday spoke with real feeling about the workers employed by that label (one rived by the recent firing of its women's wear designer, Alber Elbaz).
The convulsions of the Democrats in 1924 are, in broad movements, mirrored in the rived and bedraggled pilgrimage of the Republicans in 2016 as they stagger toward their convention behind Donald J. Trump and his rivals.
"Memoir of War," adapted from her 1985 book that was in part derived from her diaries of occupied France in World War II, depicts the writer as a young woman (Mélanie Thierry) emotionally rived by loss.
Democrats now have every reason to drag out the confirmation fight over Mr. Sessions as long as possible, leaving Mr. Trump's order defended by a Justice Department rived by dissent against a growing list of opponents.
With the embers of the old rivalry extinguished between his chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon, and chief of staff, Reince Priebus, a new realignment has emerged in a West Wing already rived by suspicion and intrigue.
After more than three decades without baseball, the Montreal Expos moved to Washington in 2005 rebranded as the Nationals, becoming perhaps the only bipartisan agreement in a capital rived by tribalism as Republicans and Democrats flocked to games.
Isn't the Trump administration forcing them to make a terrible choice, between either staying in the United States and having their families rived in two, or forfeiting their lives in America so that they can keep their families intact?
There, his course, Trump International Golf Links, has been rived with controversy, with Mr. Trump trying to push locals out of their homes, promising jobs that never materialized, fighting over an offshore wind farm and even suing the Scottish government.
But that was becoming a moot point: By 1969, the party was being torn asunder, its East and West Coast factions rived by distrust, largely because of the F.B.I. And in the court of public opinion, the Panthers had already lost.
Mr. Trump accepted Mr. Kim's invitation to meet immediately upon hearing about it from a South Korean delegation, but he has been rived with second thoughts since, worrying that he could be politically embarrassed if he gets little out of it.
Yet juxtaposing the sacred and the profane at this particular moment in time, when the Catholic church is rived with internal disputes between conservatives and liberals, and religion around the world is being weaponized and politicized, is a risky move.
Philippe Troussier, one of several nomadic Frenchmen who made a reputation coaching multiple African teams, often said that a foreign coach had the advantage of being seen as a neutral, a mediating force on a continent where many countries are rived by internal conflicts.
"China always says their investment is to help Myanmar's development and the people of Myanmar," said Hkalam Samson, the president of the Kachin Baptist Convention, a powerful group in Kachin State, which has been rived by fighting between ethnic militias and the Myanmar military.
And as you go through the show it becomes clear how important it is to have him present, right now: not just because 2017 is the bicentenary of his birth but because he is a model of resistance in a rived, self-destructive, demagogic political moment.
By acting out, de Gaulle cultivated French nationalism in a period of national decline (it was on the verge of losing a long war in Algeria) and consolidated his control over a country that was rived by unrest and by very real threats of a military coup.
Even as mourners, including hundreds of officers who came here from across the country, took tentative steps forward, they acknowledged the cathartic backdrop against which Wednesday's services took place: in a country rived by a debate over race and policing, upended by vast protests and nationwide soul searching.
Over the past few decades, the field has gone through cycles of tribalism, rived by arguments among quantitative analysts; theory-­heavy scholars working in the tradition of the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu; critical race scholars, who have brought up important but tricky points about who gets to study whom; and the urban ''symbolic interactionists'' with whom Goffman identifies.
" To read through Ms. Bening's 25 years of interviews is to hear her consistently and artfully deflect questions about her life with her husband, Warren Beatty (who recently directed her in "Rules Don't Apply") and insistently make the same point that, in her life and art, she is most interested in complex women, rived with contradictions — or, as she described such women, "human beings.
Mysus (Ancient Greek: Μυσός) was the brother of Car and Lydus in Greek mythology according to Herodotus.Smith, p. 607. CAR (Kap), a son of Phoroneus, and king of Megara, from whom the acropolis of this town de rived its name Caria. (Paus. i. 39. § 4, 40.
As the house was constructed before the days of saw mills, every lath was rived, and every timber, joist and even cornice was hewed out of the surrounding woods (as evidenced today by the axe marks on the reverse sides). Every nail, spike and hinge was individually hammered out. Tradition says that the bricks were imported from Scotland in the hold of tobacco ships.
Viking ships varied from other contemporary ships, being generally more seaworthy and lighter. This was achieved through use of clinker (lapstrake) construction. The planks from which Viking vessels were constructed were rived (split) from large, old-growth trees—especially oaks. A ship's hull could be as thin as one inch (2.5 cm), as a split plank is stronger than a sawed plank found in later craft.
The Britannica Guide to Inventions That Changed the Modern World, p. 151Curley, Robert (2012). Renewable and Alternative Energy, p. 21 Prior to the invention of sawmills, boards were rived and planed, or more often sawn by two men with a whipsaw using saddleblocks to hold the log and a pit for the pitman who worked below and got the benefit of sawdust in his eyes.
The walls are built of hewn yellow poplar logs resting on a stone foundation. The interior consists of a sawn oak board floor and a sawn chestnut ceiling, and was accessed by a white pine door on iron hinges. The school's gabled roof is covered with rived oak shingles. The chimney, located in the center of the building, was built of bricks, and fitted with an iron pipe and cook stove.
The troops also saved the boards for flooring, and rived the pine shingles for roofs. In truth, the troops did the entire work, the quartermaster department only furnishing the few tools to work with, such as nails and other hardware. Scarcely a nail was used to secure the shingles, they being hung on the rafters with wooden pegs. The spaces between the logs were chinked with moss and clay and afterward the whole was whitewashed.
They are claimed to have been introduced to Madeira following its discovery in c. 1420 and spread widely in Europe in the 16th century. Prior to the invention of the sawmill, boards were rived (split) and planed, or more often sawn by two men with a whipsaw, using saddleblocks to hold the log, and a saw pit for the pitman who worked below. Sawing was slow, and required strong and hearty men.
William Showalter is a master chairmaker who produces 18th-century-style Windsor chairs in Tennessee, US. Showalter has been making the chairs for 20 years using antique tools and a pedal-driven lathe he commissioned from a blacksmith. He uses rived oak for the arms and spindles, white pine for the seat, and birch or maple for the legs. The chairs are joined without glue, colored with milk paint made from ground limestone, curdled milk and pigment. The chairs are burnished with burlap and linseed oil for a dark-brown color and finish.
The "portable" sawmill is of simple operation. The log lies flat on a steel bed, and the motorized saw cuts the log horizontally along the length of the bed, by the operator manually pushing the saw. The most basic kind of sawmill consists of a chainsaw and a customized jig ("Alaskan sawmill"), with similar horizontal operation. Before the invention of the sawmill, boards were made in various manual ways, either rived (split) and planed, hewn, or more often hand sawn by two men with a whipsaw, one above and another in a saw pit below.
As the lowest crossing point on the Rived Dee, it was of strategic importance, particularly in the campaigns against the Welsh. During this time it was also a market town, and there was much domestic building, including the creation of the Chester Rows, where there are two levels of pedestrian walkway, one at street level, and one at a higher level under cover. Chester was involved in the Civil War, when the city was besieged, and many buildings were damaged. Following this, the city prospered and, despite the closing of the port due to silting of the river, there was much building and rebuilding during the 17th and 18th centuries.
For Covering the House, > Ends, and Sides, and for the Loft, we use Clabboard, which is Rived feather- > edeged, of five foot and a half long, that well Drawn, [smoothed] lyes close > and smooth: The Lodging Room may be lined with the same, and filled up > between, which is very Warm. These houses usually endure ten years without > repair.... The lower flour [floor] is the Ground, the upper Clabbord: This > may seem a mean way of Building, but 'tis sufficient and safest among > ordinary beginners..."Information and Direction to Such Persons as are > Inclined to America, more Especially Those Related to the Province of > Pennsylvania", reprinted in The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and > Biography Vol. IV. 1880. Philadelphia. The Pennsylvania Historical Society.

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