Sentences with phrase «enmity of»

(See quotes from this case below: Board of Trustees v. Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, No. 2002 - SC -0699-DG (Ky. 10/23/2003)(Ky., 2003)-RRB- We have been informed that the enmity of Senator Williams against the Chief Justice is so great that when William's father died, his office called the Chief Justice and requested that he not attend the funeral.
Our «hockey stick» graph became a vivid centerpiece of the climate wars, and to this day, it continues to win me the enmity of those who have conflated a problem of science and society with partisan politics.
This put them in a position where they a) sell their books for more per unit, b) see their books offered to the consumer for less per unit, c) can tell agents their royalties are higher per unit, d) are not offered in Apple's iBookstore (but are available on all Apple devices through Kindle, Nook, and Kobo, at least), and e) have earned the enmity of the other publishers in the Big Six.
Discussion section of your essay about Bosnia may include the historical roots of enmity of the Bosnian people.
And here, perhaps, we find most significant reason for the unyielding enmity of England's peers toward America.
If a lot more teachers don't speak up, however, the public has no choice but to assume that their silence is tacit approval of the unions» actions, thus earning them the justifiable enmity of a populace that is rapidly getting sick and tired of teacher union antics.
That move secured the enmity of Randi Weingarten, who ran the local union then and is now president of the American Federation of Teachers.
Gina Raimondo, the current state treasurer, won the nomination despite pushing a major pension reform during her term, which won her the enmity of public -LSB-...]
This has earned the enmity of the American Federation of Teachers and Colorado Democrats.
However, she also attracts the enmity of Le Nôtre's wily, estranged wife (Helen McCrory in Alexis Carrington mode).
Along the way, he earns the enmity of treasure hunter Ian Howe (Sean Bean) and the affection of gorgeous dork Abigail Chase (Diane «Helen of Troy» Kruger).
C.C. Little, the inventor of the modern lab mouse and founder of the Jackson Laboratory, had long used «the age old enmity of woman and the Muridae» as a sales pitch for his model organism.
Our «hockey stick» graph became a vivid centerpiece of the climate wars, and to this day, it continues to win me the enmity of those who have conflated a problem of science and society with partisan politics.
An excerpt from Todd Wilkinson's latest book looks at the media magnate's almost evangelical efforts to save the prairie dog — a passion that has earned him converts to his cause as well as the enmity of his fellow ranchers
Cuomo's victory against Green set him on the path to the governor's mansion, and the enmity of the 2006 race seems forgotten now.
Indeed, the fact that it is on the agenda at all marks a significant departure from mutual enmity of the first phase of the Coalition.
He seems to enjoy his globe - trotting consulting career with Herrick, Feinstein law firm, and his House vote against Obamacare earned him the permanent enmity of some Island Dems.
Reward came in the form of appointment to shadow home secretary, and he was able to ally himself with Blair without attracting the fatal enmity of Brown.
From the «betrayal» of the Lib Dems over the Jeremy Hunt vote, when Clegg's party abstained and won the enmity of vast swathes of the Tory party, or the vicious tactics of the «no» campaign in the electoral reform referendum which disgusted Lib Dems and led to open rowing at Cabinet, the «calm and businesslike» relationship between the two parties has become a myth anywhere below the most senior levels.
After all, while limiting property taxes has earned Cuomo plenty of gratitude from taxpayers, it's also earned the enmity of public employee unions — which remain determined to gut or repeal the cap, sooner or later.
She incurred the undying enmity of CM Quinn in 2009 when she ran against her in the primary and, to the Speaker's embarrassment, won more than 30 % of the vote.
Regarding Austin Murphy's story about The Superstars TV show (April 20): Muhammad Ali earned the lasting enmity of adversaries like Joe Frazier.
Given his litigiousness, it's no surprise that Antonious has earned the enmity of some executives in the golf industry who see him not as a creative genius but as a gadfly who likes to sprinkle the landscape with legal land mines.
This brought down upon him the enmity of the exponents of the popular and dominant Confucian teaching, which precisely during his own time was being expounded by the great Mencius.
He thus not only drew down upon himself the enmity of the persons expelled, but at the same time thereby raised the question as to his authority and its basis; his followers became excited and threatening.
Bu t to think of this as expressing the enmity of the church toward science is profoundly wrong.
The Pope would scarcely have dared risk the enmity of the most powerful monarch in Europe for what was from the standpoint of canon law a dubious act.
He braved the enmity of slave - dealers and slave - owners and is said to have baptized more than three hundred thousand.
With what secular faith do we match the zeal of militant Islam and combat the enmity of the impoverished peoples of the earth to whom the choice between war and peace presents itself as a choice of no significance?
Jesus abolished the enmity of the law to make one new man from the two.
At least the mutual enmity of Christians and Muslims would have been greatly eased.
A sight of the awesome greatness of God may overpower our strength and be more than we can endure; but if the moral beauty of God be hid, the enmity of the heart will remain in its full strength, no love can be enkindled, [our will] will not be effectual... but will remain inflexible; whereas the first glimpse of the moral and spiritual glory of God shining into the heart produces all these affects, as it were with omnipotent power, which nothing can withstand.
For the most part the persecution seems to have taken the form of the enmity of the surrounding population finding vent in isolated cases of violence.
It seems probable that Nero's implication of the Christians in the fire of Rome was the first occasion on which such an imperial edict was specifically applied to Christians; once issued, the edict, put into force only sporadically and in particular regions during the next century, was to menace Christians with persecution whenever they grew strong or incurred the enmity of pagan or Jewish neighbours.
Instead He drives them to do the uncustomary, the untraditional — to overcome enmity of clan and tribe and unite into one people, to take the unbeaten path into the land He has chosen for them.
Only the federal government, in Stern's view, has the resources and the moral authority to protect us from the violent enmity of the radical right.
It would be strategically unwise, to put it gently, if the Catholic Church, through the Vatican, were to embrace that regime diplomatically, just as it was beginning to feel the enmity of its people.
By broaching this subject shortly after the revolution, Beyzaie invited the permanent enmity of the new regime.
This earned Morgan the occasional distrust of the federal government and the enmity of reformers and muckrakers throughout the country, but he remained the dominant figure in American capitalism until his death in 1913.
Moreover, by forcing draconian DRM locks on these games, requiring an Internet connection to play them, a move aimed at fighting piracy, EA has earned the righteous enmity of its customers.

Not exact matches

Of course, for every happy outcome there's a bitter enmity for which new words aren't necessary.
The move comes as part of Washington's rapprochement with Havana after more than half a century of enmity.
The United States on Friday dramatically eased restrictions on imports of goods and services from private Cuban entrepreneurs as part of Washington's rapprochement with Havana after more than half a century of enmity.
According to a September 2017 article in The Journal of Social History titled ««Banks of the People»: The Life and Death of the U.S. Postal Savings System,» the banking fraternity would maintain its enmity toward the government savings bank for the next 50 years.
Though this simple medical device contains only about $ 1 of the drug epinephrine, the company that sells it, Mylan, earned the public's enmity and lawmakers» scrutiny after ratcheting up prices to $ 609 a box.
Fisher's enmity was directed sharply at variable annuities, whose salespeople, he says, take advantage of consumers» annuity naivete.
And, finally, the 1797 Treaty of Tripoli plainly states: «The government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian Religion, as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of Mussulmen [Moslems].»
One is to blame everything on racism, to declare that the situation proves the continued existence of old - style American racial enmity, only now in a more subtle and modernized form.
My observation is that people are concluding that in order to take care of their own spiritual lives it is necessary for them to leave the spiritual communities because they are at enmity with one another.
As the book professing to be the Word of God says: «The carnal mind is enmity [hostile] against God: it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be» (Romans 8:7).
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