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"trench warfare" Definitions
  1. warfare in which the opposing forces attack and counterattack from a relatively permanent system of trenches protected by barbed-wire entanglements
"trench warfare" Synonyms

154 Sentences With "trench warfare"

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

That outfit would really have changed trench warfare in WWI, right?
It's just the beginning of protracted trench warfare over political space.
There is no appetite for the usual, never-ending partisan trench warfare.
"Prolonged trench warfare, whether enacted or remembered, fosters paranoid melodrama," he wrote.
The four years of trench warfare on the western front proved them wrong.
This is precisely why leaking, like smoking, is so hazardous in trench warfare.
In a letter to his mother, McCrae described the horrors of trench warfare.
The conflict has become grinding trench warfare in open fields with regular shelling.
Both of them have an intestinal fortitude that would be useful in trench warfare.
"General elections aren't so much about momentum; this is about trench warfare," Plouffe said.
The details of trench warfare are again laid bare, but here with special vividness.
Trench warfare traumatized both soldiers and landscapes, and informed art and literature for years.
Are they ready for the political trench warfare that would inevitably follow a Democratic victory?
It may take several years of political trench warfare to determine which is the senior partner.
That would not, however, spare a President Clinton the political trench warfare that Obama has faced.
"I said, 'Me and my wife would rather our son died in trench warfare,' " Baldridge said.
Trenches were still used in World War II, so it's not like trench warfare disappeared entirely.
After the horrors of trench warfare in World War I, many Republicans found refuge in isolationism.
But if partisan trench warfare is inevitable, few people have more experience in the muck than Clinton.
"We do need to represent trench warfare, and we do have it in the game," Grondal says.
Nowhere is the trench warfare over registration and early voting closer or more vital than in Florida.
It makes the realities of trench warfare—the lice, the rats, the mud, the stench, the fear—immediate.
It's taken her 29 years of rock 'n' roll trench warfare to believe she has something worth saying.
Unlike Facebook and Google, Amazon isn't engaged in daily trench warfare with the news media for advertising revenue.
Investors can only watch and wait to see if Trump's characteristic negotiating bluster hardens into prolonged trench warfare.
"I said, 'Me and my wife would rather our son died in trench warfare,' " Baldridge told the Post.
With a presidential election due in 2018 the risk is that peace will be subject to political trench warfare.
U.S. anti-dumping cases typically take a year - versus 13 years and counting in its trench warfare against Airbus.
EU-NATO relations were once "trench warfare", says Sir Adam Thomson, Britain's envoy to NATO from 2014 to 2016.
But most of modern complex litigation is trench warfare — a few yards gained here, a few yards lost there.
No firm had ever come back from a wound that severe in the trench warfare of the global smartphone business.
The term shell shock was used to describe soldiers who broke down during the trench warfare of World War One.
The causes of political trench-warfare range from giant, multi-year trends to petty calculations by individual members of Congress.
In 2008, a 73-year-old former police officer was shot in the back re-creating trench warfare in Virginia.
His observations of trench warfare can be seen in the work Heavy Artillery (1919) in the Imperial War Museum, London.
A lot of it is like trench warfare on the Western Front — crazy amounts of carnage and nothing ever changes.
To get prime material to the auction block, it looks more like messy trench warfare, with juicy incentives being offered.
If you cruise through 9M9H93E9's comments, you'll see a lot of talk about flesh interfaces (shudder), LSD, and trench warfare.
With the Republicans potentially facing a contested convention, his brand of political trench warfare is now in greater demand than ever.
But despite all the hype, Washington's pretty much exactly where it was 24 hours ago: locked in bitterly partisan trench warfare.
Congress begins to work differently because with multiple parties you no longer have stagnant trench warfare — you have shifting coalition-building.
The imminent danger of a junk rating for Illinois's bonds seems to have cooled the trench warfare between the governor and lawmakers.
Still, some sources said that political trench warfare was beginning to draw Trump's team together against a common enemy -- the press corps.
Google, for instance, is deeply engaged in a kind of trench warfare with European regulators, but it's long past treating them dismissively.
We do get some good old fashioned trench warfare, but there also appears to be expansive aerial dogfights with WWI-era aircraft.
And [a Trump administration] may well be successful on some of these high-profile rules, but it's going to be trench warfare.
Recent standoffs on university campuses have resembled trench warfare, with officers firing tear gas and protesters volleying with firebombs and other projectiles.
This wasn't trench warfare, it was botaoshi, a century-old game that combines elements of American football, rugby, sumo and martial arts.
The French and British counter-attacked before the Germans reached the French capital, and the conflict soon bogged down into trench warfare.
Assault was inspired through a search for methods of warfare, something that might echo the physicality of trench warfare of WWI and WWII.
Medicare and Social Security faced shorter threats Nothing like this prolonged trench warfare followed passage of the social safety net's other central strands.
Four months of trench warfare have left four candidates with substantial delegate hauls — but no one won enough to lock in the nomination.
Science fiction author Matthew Kressel agrees, noting that a brief sequence of trench warfare is one of the movie's most interesting set pieces.
That's what northern Minnesota martial arts is really all about: desperate trench warfare in a confined space as two fighters wrestle for position.
Elections in Ohio are trench warfare, fought by waves of volunteers swarming across hundreds of thousands of front porches to rap on doors.
Its entry most likely foreclosed the possibility of a negotiated peace among belligerent powers that were exhausted from years mired in trench warfare.
Further, how will Democratic voters feel if they take the House and are engaged in trench warfare with  President Trump  and a Republican Senate?
But first, Sean Spicer on the President&aposs rough week, media bias, and what he learned from the trench warfare in the White House.
Since the 1970s, the Haqqani Network has been active in trench warfare in Afghanistan, operating out of its strongholds in Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan.
But the daily trench warfare of the business — "You have to fight for every sale," Bill Ford once told me — wasn&apost for Ghosn.
Alex: The thing to know about World War I, without really getting into the history, is that it was a war of trench warfare.
In 1917 it's the opposite, and the quotidian horror of trench warfare is quickly replaced by a more "exciting" mission to No Man's Land.
Although it is theoretically possible for a future Democratic president to assemble cross-party majorities to pass legislation, continued partisan trench-warfare seems more likely.
I expect that more than a few parents ended up fielding questions about trench warfare, mustard gas, and the Ottoman Empire in the theater lobby.
It is trench warfare, where one side has all the firepower, the other side has a nearly impenetrable shield and little of substance is accomplished.
Does anyone doubt that Trump and Pelosi would put American world leadership second to cultural trench warfare it in a bid to electrify their bases?
Sure, there was rudimentary hand-to-hand combat and trench warfare, but WWI was also the first major conflict to feature complex air and ground vehicles.
Friedman's own time at the Pumpkin is filled with a sense of inertia and pointlessness — like the trench warfare of World War I, he often notes.
Trench warfare became a sinister science, as front-line troops of every army hunkered down for hundreds of miles in conditions of appalling filth and danger.
"It was just a very special experience because of Amir, and we became very close in the way that people become close in trench warfare," Ciporin said.
Team Clinton wasn't going to come out and say it was gearing up for four years of trench warfare, even though that's probably what's going to happen.
Be smart: This week may only deepen our partisan trench warfare — more impeachment calls from the left, and more outrage about the "Hillary dossier" from the right.
But not only has this close competition fueled partisanship by turning legislating into zero-sum trench warfare, it has also turbocharged the fundraising dimension of political campaigning.
But Ms. Warren's version would require winning over a skeptical public, legislative trench warfare to pass bills in Congress, the dismantling of a private health care system.
It was incited by an absurd implosion of political entanglements and waged in rot, with the Western Front characterized by three years of attrition and trench warfare.
To a system in which the incentives did not push political parties into zero-sum trench warfare, but toward compromise and coordination that would solve pressing public problems.
And then, in the spring of 103, a vast German offensive had been dazzlingly successful; troops broke the long deadlock of trench warfare and advanced far into France.
The best part, however, was how the tracking camera worked in the trenches — and as you both have said, trench warfare was what World War I really was.
O dug in for trench warfare on Friday, with the French drugmaker confident of winning over investors and the U.S. cancer firm insisting it was better off staying independent.
Yang had zero name ID. He was talking about automation and universal basic income — topics far removed from the day-to-day trench warfare Democrats were waging against Trump.
"It's trench warfare in the battle of voter suppression," said Lloyd Leonard, the advocacy director of the League of Women Voters, the leader of the lawsuit against the commission.
Critics' rating: 90%Audience score: 89%Critics' consensus: "Hard-hitting, immersive, and an impressive technical achievement, '1917' captures the trench warfare of World War I with raw, startling immediacy."
But the political reality of a divided government does play to the genuine strength that Clinton has to offer: years of trench warfare with political opponents at home and overseas.
And it suggests a new turn for Obama, who has a habit of opting for post-partisan positioning when the partisan trench warfare is more what the moment calls for.
That act of God just came in the form of two massive hurricanes that have seemed to snap most of Washington's warring parties out of their mutually destructive trench warfare.
During the early "phoney war" stages of World War II the prospect of conducting deliberate attacks against extensive fortifications akin to the trench warfare of World War I loomed large.
Political campaigns, often compared to trench warfare, should also have some sense of due process, of basic fairness, of a presumption of innocence until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
It's a multi-year slog of trench warfare that began in Virginia last year, and will spread to many other states this fall, and last for two more years after that.
An uneasy stalemate had endured since 2000, when a UN-brokered peace agreement ended two years of trench warfare that claimed about 103,000 lives and displaced more than half a million.
After a series of failed ceasefires, the conflict has mostly devolved into stagnant trench warfare, where Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists often exchange light artillery and sniper fire from a distance.
"So I ask each and every one of you ... end the trench warfare and work together to take on the Tories," he said, using the colloquial term for the Conservative Party.
Yet in the trench warfare fight for the Republican presidential nomination — the smaller, less understood delegate races that could prove far more pivotal to Mr. Trump's campaign — the situation remains fluid.
The escalating legal trench warfare between Democrats is at its root a tussle over the extent to which a president has an obligation to voters to be above reproach and suspicion.
Medicine had improved enough so soldiers could survive previously fatal injuries, yet those wounds were freshly horrific with machine guns and trench warfare that often left the delicate facial tissue exposed.
But internally, the EU has been unable to agree on relocation, something one senior EU diplomat likened to "fighting trench warfare" that has badly undermined member states' trust in each other.
The film is the story of a 19-year-old volunteer who loses his innocence, and nearly his mind, to the horrors of trench warfare, and the action becomes progressively more nightmarish.
A kind of suburban trench warfare is simmering amid the small detached houses and neatly trimmed lawns where diehard Trump lovers live next to Trump haters, and both sides are dug in.
This year, the centennial of the Battle of the Somme, will most likely be recalled as a time when the slaughter of trench warfare found its echo in the spread of terror.
Among the consequences, Dubbs, himself a journalist turned military historian, notes, was that when the British public finally learned about the horrible nature of trench warfare, it was all the more shocked.
The members practiced marching and trench warfare; suffered from dust, heat and poison ivy; and played every sport their officers could think of to keep boredom at bay: soccer, cricket, lacrosse, baseball.
White House officials expect Gowdy to play the role of made-for-TV surrogate during the impeachment fight, offering political advice, communication skills and "trench warfare" expertise, a senior administration official said.
And, although he called for an end to trench warfare and pleaded for a restoration of party unity, he offered little to lure back moderate MPs who had resigned from his shadow cabinet.
Iran's interests in Iraq can be traced back to the 1980s Iran-Iraq war, a bloody conflict marked by trench warfare and chemical weapons that saw hundreds of thousands dead on both sides.
In "Battlefield 1," the long-running series is set against a fictionalized backdrop of World War I.That means trench warfare, mustard gas, gangrenous appendages, and battle on a scale previously unseen on Earth.
It's more like political trench warfare, in which one group of parents laments the organic student-centered approaches of yore while another freaks out about math problems they think are too politically correct.
Barr will field questions from Democrats about immigration as well, the spokeswoman said, which are likely to touch on the trench warfare being fought over funding for a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
But in World War I, mile upon mile of coiled barbed wire wove through the blasted terrain of trench warfare to create entanglements that impeded foot soldiers and exposed them to withering fire and bombardment.
Given the fairly incremental gains after months of trade trench warfare, and the cost to US consumers, manufacturing and farmers -- who needed a $28 billion bailout -- the question must be asked: What did Trump gain?
Given the fairly incremental gains after months of trade trench warfare, and the cost to US consumers, manufacturing and farmers -- who needed a $28 billion bailout -- the question must be asked: what did Trump gain?
Still, by the White House's own account, eight years of trench warfare in Washington trimmed the top 1-percenters' share, after taxes and transfers, to only 15.4 percent, from 16.6 percent of the nation's income.
The Army first experimented with fitness tests (as well as intelligence tests) to help sort new soldiers during World War I, and soon afterward settled on an exam that reflected the rigors of trench warfare.
LIVERPOOL, England (Reuters) - Jeremy Corbyn, leader of Britain's main opposition Labour Party, called on his lawmakers on Wednesday to end "trench warfare" and unite to challenge the ruling Conservatives and deliver "socialism of the 21st century".
"Trump's nationalist argument was economically pragmatic from the start, devoid of the ideological language of the trench warfare that had stalemated presidential politics for the last 35 years," Zito and Todd write early in the book.
We barely hear a shot or a shell, and news of the horror of trench warfare — the story starts in 1915 — reaches us mostly through the words of men who have returned, briefly, from the front.
Filmed in what looks like one long continuous shot, it's a bracing view of trench warfare in World War I. The war to end all wars thus produces a movie that very nimbly ends the year.
If Trump can escape his Washington trench warfare -- be it the encirclement of Russia's election meddling or the pressure to deliver on health care -- he may find in Macron a leader willing to engage where he can.
In the hours after two of President Trump's former advisers delivered his administration potentially grave legal setbacks, the mood inside the White House was grim, a return to a trench-warfare mentality born out of muscle memory.
This gives Democrats the chance to press President Trump about whether he is interested in making progress on his stated goals or is a hypocrite intent on waging partisan trench warfare for the remainder of his term.
Furthermore, leadership is not simply telling people what they want to hear nor is it outlasting those who disagree through the political version of trench warfare, in which any battles won are likely only Pyrrhic victories at best.
With products today, we are either living in an echo chamber of like-minded people who agree with us all the time, or we're duking it out in trench warfare format for little gain and few opinions changed.
WASHINGTON — President Trump's administration foreshadowed weeks, if not months, of trench warfare with Congress on Tuesday as it defied demands for documents and testimony on multiple fronts in an effort to thwart expanding investigations mounted by House Democrats.
Drawing back from imposing tariffs on the United States after 15 years of trench warfare with Boeing at the WTO would upset Airbus which has threatened to review long-term UK investments after Brexit, several industry sources said.
At the same time, as Frances Lee has noted, the past few decades have been a period of unusually close two-party competition, which has produced a kind of zero-sum political trench warfare between the two parties.
While that might raise doubts about Evergreen's credibility as a potential majority owner, merely having a takeover offer in hand has allowed Elliott to fast-track what typically would be months of trench warfare between activists and reluctant boards.
" The experts testifying at the hearing also offered warnings on cyber threats: Kevin Mandia, the CEO of FireEye, said that he believes the U.S. is "likely to face an enduring, more protracted cyber campaign akin to 'cyber trench-warfare.
Many artists interpreted the terrible mortality of World War I and its new technologies, from John Singer Sargent with his 1919 "Gassed" showing the horrifying effects of mustard gas, to Otto Dix, who responded to his harrowing experiences with trench warfare.
"Anyone who's coming up to New York should assume they're fighting a lot of trench warfare," said Richard Gowan, senior fellow at the United Nations University, told me earlier this month, speaking about the foreign-policy conflicts within the administration.
"Anyone who's coming up to New York should assume they're fighting a lot of trench warfare," Richard Gowan, a senior fellow at the United Nations University, told me earlier this month, speaking about the foreign policy conflicts within the administration.
Axelrod's key insight was that the static nature of trench warfare — with each British or French unit occupying a position opposite a specific German unit for days or even weeks at a time — changed the incentives of people on both sides.
Today we face no horrors equal to the Great War, but there is the same loss of faith in progress, the reality of endless political trench warfare, the paranoid melodrama, the specter that we are all being dehumanized amid the fight.
A tenuous ceasefire deal agreed in February 2015 managed to halt fierce tank battles and the use of indiscriminate artillery systems, but soldiers on the front line remain engaged in trench warfare that includes the use of mortar systems and snipers.
"A few weeks ago, everyone thought we would be dragged into some terrible trench warfare over bad net neutrality legislation," said Evan Greer, the campaign director for Fight for the Future, a nonprofit that supports a free and open internet.
At the same time, Bobby has prepared his office for "trench warfare," likening Stearn's arrest to Pearl Harbor and promising his troops that the company will emerge from the coming war like the United States after World War II — more powerful than ever.
In 1915, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin was serving on the front lines of World War I. Somewhere in the blood, sweat, and death of never-ending trench warfare, Teilhard glimpsed something that would haunt him: the vast inter-connectedness of living things.
It has engaged in Somme-esque trench warfare within its own congressional caucus, shut down the government without a strategy for winning anything out of it, and campaigned on a sub-Ayn Randian narrative about the heroic businessman and the mooching 47 percent.
Despite the grim milestone, experts do not expect much change in Russia, where victims still face the kind of stigma prevalent in the 1980s in the West and where continuing trench warfare between the Kremlin and independent nongovernmental organizations saps collective efforts.
It not only would help her reach younger voters, among whom she has performed miserably in the primaries, but could also fortify her for the digital trench warfare she can expect if she faces the Twitter-adept Republican favorite, Donald J. Trump, in the fall.
The neighbors remained at peace until 1998, when a simmering dispute over the Yirga triangle, a piece of rocky land along the border that had never been clearly demarcated in colonial maps, exploded into two years of tank and trench warfare in which 100,13 died.
Florida, by contrast, remains mired in a bitter partisan trench warfare with few last-minute undecided voters open to persuasion, which encourages the use of ever more potent political artillery during the campaign and bitter fights over the counting of votes after the election.
Some argue that the selective service is a relic from the age of trench warfare, saying the sophisticated and highly technological nature of future fights means the nation will never again have to flood the military ranks with ground-pounders who deploy en masse.
There is no good reason why our national political institutions should descend into zero-sum hyper-partisan trench warfare, or why we should experience yet another year of existential political dread, fearing that if our side loses the 2020 election, America will be irrevocably broken.
But what make the system special are those plaques that honor lesser-known London toilers, like Willy Clarkson (Theatrical Wigmaker), Prince Peter Kropotkin (Theorist of Anarchism) and Hertha Ayrton (a physicist, she invented a fan device used in trench warfare for dispersing poisonous gas).
The results here in a district stretching from Charlotte to Fayetteville presage a brutal, national campaign that seems destined to become the political equivalent of trench warfare, with the two parties rallying their supporters but clashing over a vanishingly small slice of contested electoral terrain.
Yet the tale unfolds with considerable sensitivity, offering plenty of haunting images while capturing the chaos and fear of trench warfare -- especially through the eyes of MacKay (perhaps best known for "Captain Fantastic"), in a genuine breakout performance -- augmented by Thomas Newman's wondrous musical score.
From Day 20093, Iran saw something else: a chance to make a client state of Iraq, a former enemy against which it fought a war in the 22009s so brutal, with chemical weapons and trench warfare, that historians look to World War I for analogies.
They beautifully illustrate the narrator's dreams and adventures through Coney Island: encounters with fortunetellers and Steeplechase Park's famous Funny Face, traumatic memories of trench warfare, and repressed desires ("I was 13 years old when the Blowhole invaded my fantasies," says a masturbating Albert Grass).
In his boldest move since coming to power in April, Abiy offered last month to make peace with Eritrea 20 years after the conflict in which an estimated 80,000 people died, many of them scythed down by machine-gun fire in World War One-style trench warfare.
Alarmed by the tight race for a congressional seat in Ohio, Republicans are steeling for a 242-day campaign of trench warfare as they fight to keep control of the House, pinning their hopes on well-funded outside groups and a slashing negative message about Democrats.
She's a veteran of many years of partisan trench warfare, of personal vilification, of seeing how hard positive change is (and yes, some of that applies to me too, although not to remotely the same degree.) She's not going to be able to promise magic without being obviously false.
Combat-related tasks, like hauling ammo cans and dragging a wounded platoonmate to safety, will be practiced with kettlebells and weighted sleds — a sort of middle ground between the trench-warfare exercises of World War I and the general fitness that has dominated the Army's evaluation for so long.
Disputes over this point led in 2014 to one of the magazine's most famous controversies to date: Jacobinghazi, which is complicated but was basically a World War I–style intellectual dispute in which a small (real or perceived) aggression mobilized a series of alliances until the entire continent of left Twitter was engaged in brutal trench warfare.
In my essay, I argued that one way to dissolve this destructive zero-sum trench warfare would be to move to a multiparty system by changing electoral laws, thus effectively ending the two-party system that has been a marked feature of American politics for our entire political history — a function of our single-member district, plurality-winner approach to elections.
Another scenario is that establishment Republicans banish the Trump faction and Democrats banish the Sanders faction after the 2016 elections, and both parties go back to the predictable and intractable trench warfare battle lines that have become increasingly dug in over the past two decades, using nastier and nastier tactics to subvert internal divisions in service of the larger fight against a common enemy.
Listen closely to the swell of film-noir jazz trumpet on album opener "Faith in Nothing Except Salvation," and you'll notice that he's marking the polyrhythmic offbeats with what sounds like the scratch of sandpaper; try to figure out why the staccato hits on "Hope in Suffering (Escaping Oblivion & Overcoming Powerless)" conjure images of trench warfare, and you'll probably flash back to the carrion fly-like buzzing seeded earlier in the track.

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