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30 Sentences With "takes up arms"

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

Yet another soldier takes up arms in the war against Christmas.
Brave indeed is the scholar who takes up arms against this sea of skeptics.
Eventually he takes up arms — in this case, cobblestones — to fight on the front lines.
Why are we continually surprised when a man takes up arms and commits mass murder?
A group of high school girls takes up arms to resist the deadly misogyny unleashed by the breach.
Chris Pine takes up arms as Robert the Bruce, the King of Scots, who organizes an outmanned army to win back Scotland from its English occupiers.
A white man takes up arms against a stifling government and then gives up on the idea of freeing slaves after learning there are laws against it.
Laurence Olivier played the British commander, General Burgoyne, Burt Lancaster a Yankee pastor who takes up arms against the British, and Kirk Douglas a rebel who discovers his true beliefs.
But instead of trying to survive in a cramped apartment, the protagonist of Spacetronaut's Global Game Jam game takes up arms against the swarms of children and weird monsters prowling the streets.
What's being portrayed is a bizarre attempt at unconditional empathy in which an inveterate gun hater not only takes up arms but also seems to transfer her very identity to a lethal weapon.
Mr. Lipton takes up arms to disarm, with a cathartic exercise in wish fulfillment that even as it draws blood (in a variety of ways), drains the testosterone from the classic shoot-'em-up.
During the Spanish Civil War a farmer takes up arms to fight for the Republican side.
Now vindicated, John takes up arms in righteous fury and kills Hastings, who is hiding in his gunsmith shop, by shooting up a cask of gunpowder inside his own gun store, blowing up the building.
They march to the city to protest to the authorities, and the social revolution passes through the village where his family is. Juan takes up arms with them as the revolution marches to the front lines, hoping for a better dawn.
Rama releases an arrow which kills him instantly. The death of his brother scares Ravan greatly. Indrajit hastily tries to arrange a ceremony to receive great boons and powers but is interrupted by Hanuman and Angada. Lakshman takes up arms against Indrajit and kills him.
After learning of his brother's departure, the villain searches for him and his family and orders his henchman Nanjappan (Sandow M. M. A. Chinnappa Thevar) to kill them. The family gets separated. The boy, now grown up, takes up arms against his evil uncle. Like Robin Hood, he helps the downtrodden, exposes villains and restores peace.
Enticed by his childhood friend, who flaunts his success, Madesha decides to try his luck in the city. However, in the city, he gets tangled with anti-social elements and ends up in jail. His anxious mother comes to the city in search of him. Jogi is misled and convinced by underworld dons that if he takes up arms, it would be easy for him to find his mother.
Yusuf is warned by Hızır just before the phenomenon occurs, but being an old and blind man, he cannot reach the river in time. Köroğlu is by the river when the foam starts flowing, but, as he is ignorant of the significance of the event, he does not drink from the river. Instead, his horse Kırat does and becomes immortal. After his father's death, Köroğlu takes up arms against the Bey.
The King comes upon Guy and does not recognize him, but Guy convinces him to follow fate and let him fight the giant. Guy takes up arms and slays the giant. He reveals his identity to the King, but requests that no one else learn of his return until his pilgrimage vow is discharged, six years hence. Guy journeys to Warwick, where he will remain incognito and live off the charity of Phillis’ court.
When his wife is burned at the stake after being falsely accused of witchcraft, the vampire Count Dracula declares all the people of Wallachia will pay with their lives. He summons an army of demons which overruns the country, causing the people to live lives of fear and distrust. To combat this, the outcast monster hunter Trevor Belmont takes up arms against Dracula's forces, aided by the magician Sypha Belnades and Dracula's dhampir son Alucard.
In addition to historical characters like Jefferson, the play introduced fictional characters who were factors in the story's development. Charles S. Watson, in his book The History of Southern Drama, commented that the drama "recognizes the indispensable contribution of common people to the American Revolution." Captain Hugh Taylor, whose father was an indentured servant, suggests the phrase "pursuit of happiness" to Jefferson, and Cephus, who had been a chicken thief, "reforms and takes up arms bravely".
Pumpkinhead later claims this was his job during Morpheus' absence. Merv seems to be in charge of the construction and demolition of the Dreaming, though he often complains that his job is superfluous since Dream can change any of it at will. He takes up arms to fight the Furies in The Kindly Ones and is killed, but he was returned to life by the new Dream in The Wake. Mervyn also appeared in his own spin-off to The Sandman series called Merv Pumpkinhead: Agent of DREAM, published in 2000.
Writing takes up arms in the disputes of the worth of women, however, the freedom of speech of the women characters of the renaissance often occur in the absence of men. Literary dialogue often silenced or excluded women, however, Moderata Fonte breaks this tradition in creating the Worth of Women by the complete absence of men. In this dialogue the worth of women is not questioned, but rather the worth of men is put on trial in their garden debate. The second part of Fonte's work demonstrates what it means to become a renaissance woman through intellectual understanding and feminized friendship.
The police later managed to evict the demonstrators from the building and arrested one person. Ayatollah Ahmed Khatami, a senior cleric of Islamic republic called for pro-democracy protest leaders to be punished "without mercy" including execution for some. Khatami stated that "anyone who takes up arms to fight with the people, they are worthy of execution," and "those who disturbed the peace and destroyed public property were 'at war with God'" and "should be 'dealt with without mercy'". People across the world released green balloons in what would be called "Balloon Day" in support of the protesters.
1949 and Relating to the Protection of Victims of Non- International Armed Conflicts (Additional Protocol II) § 4789 (1987) ("Those who belong to armed forces or armed groups may be attacked at any time."); Yoram Dinstein, The Conduct of Hostilities Under the Law of International Armed Conflict 94 (2004) ("When a person takes up arms or merely dons a uniform as a member of the armed forces, he automatically exposes himself to enemy attack."). Accordingly, the Department does not believe that U.S. citizenship would immunize a senior operational leader of al-Qa'ida or its associated forces from a use of force abroad authorized by the AUMF or in national self-defense.
When his wife is burned at the stake after being falsely accused of witchcraft, the vampire Count Dracula declares all the people of Wallachia will pay with their lives. He summons an army of demons which overruns the country, causing the people to live lives of fear and distrust. To combat this, the outcast monster hunter Trevor Belmont takes up arms against Dracula's forces, aided by the magician Sypha Belnades and Dracula's dhampir son Alucard. The series is based on the video game series by Konami, and is written by Warren Ellis and produced by Frederator Studios, Powerhouse Animation Studios, Shankar Animation, Project 51 Productions and Mua Film.
Canons 20-21 deal with clerics. Canon 20 says a cleric should not be held guilty if he takes up arms in self-defense, but he cannot take up arms for any other reason nor can he act like a knight. This was an important concern for the Crusader states; clerics were generally forbidden from participating in warfare in European law, but the Crusaders needed all the manpower they could find, and only one year before, Antioch had been defended by the Patriarch following the Battle of Ager Sanguinis, one of the calamities referred to in the introduction to the canons. Canon 21 says that a monk or canon regular who apostatizes should either return to his order or go into exile.
A small summary of the chapter's plot was published on the former Evil Ink Comics website: > Ten years after the "…Turbine Blade", son Claudio emerges from the depths of > Shylos Ten, the Fence's "quiet" planet where the Red Army performs its > brutal interrogations and imprisonments. In finding out that his entire > family has been murdered, Claudio begins his quest for vendetta. His foes, > Supreme Tri-Mage Wilhelm Ryan and General Mayo Deftinwolf sense that he is > still alive and holds special powers. They know they must stop him before he > defeats them. Meanwhile, Inferno (Jesse Kilgannon) takes up arms against the > Red Army (“Man your Battlestations”) in an effort to seek the same kind of > vengeance on him. In Claudio’s re-emergence he teams up with Ambellina, the > Prise who is cast out by her peers and forced to be his guide.
In series finale The Gift, though she is reluctant to use weapons or cause harm, when Luke falls deathly ill for the first time ever due to the machinations of the Blathereen-Slitheen, Sarah Jane takes up arms to confront them. In the episode's conclusion, regretfully she is forced to kill them using Mr Smith. Sarah Jane next appears in the Tenth Doctor two-part Doctor Who finale, "The End of Time", in 2010. When The Doctor is slowly dying from radiation poisoning, he makes timely visits to his close friends and companions; The Doctor saves Luke's life from an oncoming car on Bannerman Road (an inside joke by Russell T Davies commenting on actors' failure to look for cars before crossing the street because traffic is always stopped for them, something that he believes is especially important in a children’s show) and bids a silent farewell to Luke and to Sarah Jane.
As the principal organiser of Operation Blue Star, Vaidya was well aware of being a high-profile target for assassins, but never regretted his role, stating in a 1985 interview: "I do not see any difference in taking up arms against a foreign enemy or an enemy from within...one who takes up arms against his own brother-citizens, against his own Constitution and legally-constituted government is enemy enough, deserving the most ruthless punishment." Despite numerous death threats being sent to his offices in the months before his retirement, he remained equally calm about the very real danger to his life: "After seeing two wars I can't run away from danger. If a bullet is destined to get me, it will come with my name written on it." Following Vaidya's retirement, he took up residence in Pune, India, where he built a three- bedroom bungalow for his retirement. Just six months later, on 10 August 1986, he was shot to death in his white Maruti 800, bearing Registration No. DIB 1437, while driving home from the market on Rajendrasinhji Marg, at around 11:45 a.m.

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