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53 Sentences With "barbarities"

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

If we don't acknowledge the media, these barbarities will happen, again, and again, and again.
Barbarities abounded: the systemic rape of sex slaves, bloodshed, the countrywide banning of the Korean language.
Although talk of genocide has subsided, Sooka said barbarities were continuing and she provided some graphic testimony.
And it departed from previous models of war only in ramping up their barbarities with modern technology.
What's missing from this staging is a sense of connection to the barbarities that torment all of the characters.
As we survey the illegalities, barbarities and strategic blunders that marked the ill-named "global war on terror" after the attacks of Sept.
Exceptions include the veteran British graphic artist Sue Coe, who finds focus for her classic Expressionism and her lifelong sorrow and anger at human barbarities.
What finally moved Clinton to act was not ethics but politics: in 22013, as he prepared to run for reëlection, images of Serbian barbarities began to affect his prospects.
After Mike Pence said that "provocations by Russia [in Syria] need to be met with American strength," Mr Trump disagreed—preferring to slap down his running-mate rather than rebuke Mr Putin for his barbarities in Aleppo.
There is no reasonable mechanism for comparing barbarities, but among all of the cruelties of this past month one in particular beggars belief: that among the separated children at our southern border are toddlers and even infants.
With billions of people celebrating Christmas and exchanging wishes of peace, perhaps we will see at least some of the inspired and faithful — perhaps, even political leaders — take personal steps which reduce the barbarities which humanity commits against itself in many ongoing conflicts.
Ms. Gruber called herself a witness, and in an era of barbarities and war that left countless Jews displaced and stateless, she often crossed the line from journalist to human rights advocate, reporting as well as shaping events that became the headlines and historical footnotes of the 20th century.
Madhava Rao & Prasad Rao participates in several barbarities in shade on honorable which is exposed by Kiran. Hence, begrudged Madhava Rao onslaughts when Narayana one that acquitted from prison saves him. Learning that, he is the son of his Dharma Rao Narayana turns him as valiant.
Besides, Suraiah (Satyanarayana) a deleterious and always begrudges Chandraiah. Yet, benevolent Chandraiah knitted his elder daughter Satya with Prasad. Ramakrishna is a gallant who always accepts the challenges, and triumphs which perturbs his father. Meanwhile, Suraiah carries several barbarities in the village, and to escape he purports devils on the outskirts.
L. Carey & A. Hart, 1836), 3. However, though “it was mutually agreed upon to treat the prisoners taken on either side according to the ordinary rules of war, a few months only elapsed before similar barbarities were practiced with all their former remorselessness.”Henry Bill, The History of the World (1854), 142.
However, Henry Bill, another contemporary, wrote that, although "it was mutually agreed upon to treat the prisoners taken on either side according to the ordinary rules of war, a few months only elapsed before similar barbarities were practiced with all their former remorselessness."Henry Bill, The History of the World (1854), 142.
Besides, Bhanoji Rao turns as malicious one that creates turbulence in the society with his barbarities in the veil of virtuous. Here, Murali ripes into a tough nut to him without knowing their relation. So, to thwart him Bhanoji Rao clutches Suresh but Murali does not yield. So, he orders to eliminate him.
Nevertheless, Ravi mutes to uphold his father's faith in his brother. Besides, Buchi Babu (Kota Srinivasa Rao) a malicious conducts several barbarities in society. At present, Gowthami, daughter of Ram Mohan Rao loves his son Raghu. Being cognizant of it, Ram Mohan Rao moves for the alliance associating his mentor Gopal Krishna (Gummadi).
Haarlem was a Calvinist center that was known for its enthusiastic support of the rebels. A garrison of 4,000 troops defended the city with such intensity that Don Fadrique contemplated withdrawing. His father, Alva, threatened to disown him if he stopped the siege, so the barbarities intensified. Each army hung captives on crosses facing the enemy.
The film begins in a village where Ramudu (Nandamuri Balakrishna) a callow is raised by his grandmother (Nirmalamma). Everyone in the village likes him due to his amicable nature. Moreover, he is a trustworthy servant to a wise person Raghavaiah (Rao Gopal Rao). Besides, Paidi Kondaiah (Nutan Prasad) a malicious, carries out several barbarities in the village along with his son Gallibabu (Sudhakar).
During his second trial, which began on Monday, September 10, 2012 in the Limburg Criminal Court in Hasselt, he was convicted of a dozen rapes with violence, sexual assault with a weapon, several attempted murders and acts of torture and barbarities. But given his life imprisonment sentence on October 21, 2011, the second verdict did not give Janssen any additional prison time.
The film begins in a village where Kittaiah (Rajendra Prasad) an advent devotee of Lord Krishna who calls him Kannayya out of adoration. Kittaiah always bars the barbarities of his malicious maternal uncle Bangaraiah (Kota Srinivasa Rao). His mother Janakamma (Annapurna) takes the oath to marry his uncle's daughter Saroja (Shobana) to hit his conceit. Saroja a vainglory woman, returns from abroad when Kittaiah teases her.
The endless cycle of sexuality and reproduction in a water-flooded universe gives her work a distinction (fig. 1.26). Abul Mansur wrote, 'Although she is deeply hurt and revoltedby the organized barbarities and depravity of man, she adopts the means of allegorical expressionism, rather than the direct statement, for her intensely subjective feelings.' Traditional symbols such as the hand, lotus etc. are used in her current work.
Besides, Narasimham (Rao Gopal Rao) a malicious carries out several barbarities in the village. Bangaru Muvva Bala Gopalam (Nandamuri Balakrishna) a gallant always confronts his cruelties. At this juncture, the children get closer to him, so, he adopts and also words never call them as orphans. Meanwhile, Rekha (Suhasini) a vainglory medico is the daughter of a multimillionaire Shekar Rao (Jaggayya) lands on medical camp when Gopalam teases her friends.
Besides, two malicious Veerabhadraiah (Chalapathi Rao), and Karanam Kanakaiah (Gollapudi Maruti Rao) carry out several barbarities in the village. Meanwhile, Panchayat elections step forward when a gap arises between Narasaiah & Madhavaiah because each of them supports different parties. Exploiting it, the blackguards create a rift that turns into the rivalry between the two and they detach. Moreover, Kanakaiah conspires to knit Lalitha with Veerabhadraiah's roguish son Sundaram (Sudhakar).
Over the course of the war, he showed great disdain towards his opposition, describing the British in his memoirs as "a foe who have not only insulted every principle which governs civilized nations but by their barbarities offered the grossest indignities to human nature."Wolcott Papers, vol.1, (Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford, Connecticut), 240. The Continental Congress appointed him Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and he was elected to the Congress in 1775.
According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: > All the impartial witnesses agree that the police were either indifferent or > encouraged the barbarities, and that the major part of the National Guard > was indifferent or inactive. No organized effort was made to protect the > Negroes or disperse the murdering groups. The lack of frenzy and of a large > infuriated mob made the task easy. Ten determined officers could have > prevented most of the outrages.
Meanwhile, Shankaraiah looks a match for Lakshmi which breaks up because of Gopi's misdeeds and it leads to Shankaraiah's death. Right now, Gopi aims to acquire his own recognition for which he moves towards the city. Parallelly, in another village two malicious Dharma Rayudu (Satyanarayana) & Narasimha Naidu (Nutan Prasad) carry out their barbarities and tries to overpower on each other. Fortunately, Vijaya resides therein, daughter of the School Master (Kantha Rao) who too a victim of their cruelty.
As explained by Spanish prime minister Godoy: Sometimes the guerrilleros tortured their numerous prisoners, which in turn generated retaliations upon the civilians, in an endless spiral of violence."These peasants they [the Spaniards] hanged and shot whenever they fell into their hands; and their incensed comrades committed, in return, the most merciless barbarities on their prisoners". In Cassel, John; Smith, John and Howitt, William – John Cassel’s Illustrated History of England, vol. 5, London, 1861, p. 17.
The exploits of himself and his friend form the thread of a semihistorical narrative, full of racy humour, in spite of the barbarities that find a place in it. This book also was illustrated by Rops and others. In 1876 De Coster introduced Xavier Mellery to the island of Marken asking him to deliver drawings for the Tour du Monde magazine. In 1870 De Coster became professor of general history and of French literature at the military school.
A conviction could be viewed as an indictment of the institution of slavery, and would humiliate the planters in the eyes of their slaves. There would be a danger that the slaves would refuse to obey orders, and the whole system would break down. This was not an isolated incident. They ordered deportation of the planter Maguero for barbarities against his slaves, and wrote that there were other cases that were even more serious, but did not have the "clarity" afforded by the planter's confession.
Such a religious cast had also been part of the framework of earlier English accounts of captivity by Barbary pirates. The conflict between the English colonists and the French and Indians led to the emphasis of Indians' cruelty in English captivity narratives, to inspire hatred for their enemies. In William Flemming's Narrative of the Sufferings (1750), Indian barbarities are blamed on the teachings of Roman Catholic priests. During Queen Anne's War, French and Abenaki warriors made the Raid on Deerfield in 1704, killing many settlers and taking more than 100 persons captive.
Some parts are quite lurid, such as her description of the wreck of the Charles Eaton, a ship that went down in the Torres Strait in 1834. It was claimed that many children survived the shipwreck only to be eaten by cannibals. She describes Aboriginal 'monsters' and their 'wanton barbarities' in her A Mother's Offering account of shipwrecked Eliza Fraser's treatment, which she explains is a result of Islanders and aborigines being more prone to 'unrestrained passions' than the British. Life's dangers were a frequent theme of 19th-century Australian children's fiction.
Phayer, 2000, pp. 27–28. Myron C. Taylor passed a US Government memorandum to Pius on 26 September 1942, outlining intelligence received from the Jewish Agency for Palestine which said that Jews from across the Nazi Empire were being systematically "butchered". Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information which might "tend to confirm the reports", and if so, what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the "barbarities".Diplomatic Correspondence: US Envoy Myron C. Taylor to Cardinal Maglione; 26 September 1942.
Thatcher became an advocate of Croatian and Slovenian independence. Commenting on the Yugoslav Wars, in a 1991 interview for Croatian Radiotelevision, she was critical of Western governments for not recognising the breakaway republics of Croatia and Slovenia as independent and for not supplying them with arms after the Serbian-led Yugoslav Army attacked. In August 1992 she called for NATO to stop the Serbian assault on Goražde and Sarajevo, to end ethnic cleansing during the Bosnian War, comparing the situation in Bosnia–Herzegovina to "the barbarities of Hitler's and Stalin's".
Both had come inspired by the idea that "European colonisation would bring moral and social progress to the continent and free its inhabitants 'from slavery, paganism and other barbarities.' Each would soon learn the gravity of his error."Liesl Schillinger, "Traitor, Martyr, Liberator", The New York Times, 22 June 2012, accessed 23 October 2014 Conrad published his short novel Heart of Darkness in 1899. Casement would later take on a different kind of writing to expose the conditions he found in the Congo during his official investigation for the British government.
The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey. Corry was not convinced of the integrity of these freedom fighters for in the following January he said > the Troubles & Barbarities in Poland, committed by the Confederates on their > Neighbours, still continue, without any distinction of Profession, or > otherwise, which plainly shews that these outrages are only committed with > the view of Plunder. The Posts throughout all Parts of Poland, are likewise > robbed daily, & no security for Travellers, as the Roads are over all full > of Robbers.Letter from Trevor Corry to the Secretary of State for the > Northern Department, William Nassau de Zuylestein, 4th Earl of Rochford.
Amidst the pools of blood, we could make out some of the corpses—some lying on their backs, others on their bellies; this one in a kneeling position, that one with his arms raised toward heaven, begging for vengeance or mercy .... While I stared at the terrible scene, filled with dread, my master drew it. We returned home and the next morning my master showed me his first print of La Guerra, which I looked at in horror. 'Sir,' I asked him, 'Why do you draw these barbarities which men commit?' He replied, 'To warn men not to be barbarians ever again.
Taylor set up a Christian Evidence Society and lectured in London pubs dressed in elaborate vestments, attacking the Anglican liturgy and the barbarities of the Establishment for what he called its "Pagan creed". At this time blasphemy was a criminal offence against the faith "by law established", and he was sentenced to a year in gaol. In his cell he wrote The Diegesis, attacking Christianity on the basis of comparative mythology and attempting to expound it as a scheme of solar myths. He was an advocate of the Christ myth theory and has been described as a "staunch defender of the mythicist thesis".
Later, however, as Shakespeare's influence began growing in France, Voltaire tried to set a contrary example with his own plays, decrying what he considered Shakespeare's barbarities. Voltaire may have been present at the funeral of Isaac Newton, and met Newton's niece, Catherine Conduitt. In 1727, he published two essays in English, Upon the Civil Wars of France, Extracted from Curious Manuscripts and Upon Epic Poetry of the European Nations, from Homer Down to Milton. After two and a half years in exile, Voltaire returned to France, and after a few months in Dieppe, the authorities permitted him to return to Paris.
Taylor asked if the Vatican might have any information which might tend to "confirm the reports", and if so, what the Pope might be able to do to influence public opinion against the "barbarities". Cardinal Maglione handed Harold H. Tittmann, Jr. a response to the letter on 10 October. The note thanked Washington for passing on the intelligence, and confirmed that reports of severe measures against the Jews had reached the Vatican from other sources, though it had not been possible to "verify their accuracy". Nevertheless, "every opportunity is being taken by the Holy See, however, to mitigate the suffering of these unfortunate people".
The Gazette des Ardennes regularly published propaganda articles that sought to deny the French of a German enemy image. Articles would carry such themes as: the Kaiser has always been known and respected for promoting peace, even among the British and French intellectual elite; the Kaiser is a kind and gentle family man; "all the stories about the German barbarities are poisonous lies"; German occupying soldiers are kind to and loved by French children; and Germans have an irrepressible love of music, religion, and morality that permeates wherever they are. The themes are illustrative of "defense by denial". Also possible to use is "defense by admission accompanied by justification".
May argued that, being "a very sickly man," he had "never acted in all the voyage," while Bishop reminded the court that he was "forced away," and, being only eighteen years of age during the 1694 mutiny, desired mercy. Dawson, the only defendant to plead guilty, was granted a reprieve. The remainder of the death sentences were upheld. Sparkes was the only pirate to publicly express some regret, but not for piracy, which was of "lesser concern"—instead, he was repentant for the "horrid barbarities he had committed, though only on the bodies of the heathen," implying that he had participated in the violation of the women aboard the Mughal ships.
Celsus argues that the Christian interpretation of certain Biblical passages as allegorical was nothing more than a feeble attempt to disguise the barbarities of their scriptures. Origen refutes this by pointing out that Celsus himself supports without question the widely accepted view that the poems of Homer and Hesiod are allegories and accuses Celsus of having a double standard. Origen quotes several myths from Plato, comparing them to the myths of the Bible, and praising both as having sublime spiritual meanings. He then proceeds to attack the myths of Homer and Hesiod, including the castration of Ouranos and the creation of Pandora, labelling them as "not only very stupid, but also very impious".
James Saxon Sir Richard Phillips was an English teacher, author, publisher, Sheriff of London, and a vegetarianism activist. At the age of twelve, he accidentally witnessed the barbarities of a London slaughterhouse, and while attending the Chiswick School he saw a fish being cut open, which contained the remains of smaller fish in the intestine. It was then brought to the table and served to eat. His appetite was "revolted at the idea of eating part of a creature so lately and so palpably enjoying itself in its own element," so he excused himself from the table, and in that moment, he chose he would maintain a rigid abstinence from meat eating.
Antoine was Guillaume Marescot's stepfather. "He wanted to devote himself to medicine, as did his great-uncle Jean Loysel, physician to Louis XII and François I. His father did not approve, saying that despite the danger to which doctors are forced to expose themselves from day to day, a doctor could only be a doctor; instead a lawyer could become president and chancellor."Joly Vie de Loysel In Toulouse, where his father sent him, Loysel met Cujas, and this master" was the cause that he did not leave the science of law, of which the other doctors disgusted him because of their barbarities." He was linked by an accomplice friendship to Pierre Pithou.
Two days after the Paris Attacks of November 2015, Qwabe posted a message on Facebook saying that he did not stand with France and would not be changing his profile picture to the French Tricolour flag because for many, it was a symbol of a state "that has for years terrorised – and continues to terrorise – innocent lives in the name of imperialism, colonialism, and other violent barbarities". In an interview with The Sunday Times, Qwabe said that he would support a campaign by victims of French atrocities to remove the French flag from their campuses, and said that it was no different to the Nazi swastika to those victims.After Rhodes he wants to tear down tricolore. Oliver Thring, The Sunday Times, 27 December 2015.
News from a distance was less full and regular than before; yet when great events happened, reports spread over the country with great rapidity, through messengers in the service of patriotic organizations. The quality of reporting was still imperfect. The Salem Gazette printed a full but colored account of the battle of Lexington, giving details of the burning, pillage, and barbarities charged to the British, and praising the militia who were filled with "higher sentiments of humanity." The Declaration of Independence was published by Congress, July 6, 1776, in the Philadelphia Evening Post, from which it was copied by most of the newspapers in the new nation; but some of them did not mention it until two weeks later, and even then found room for only a synopsis.
Once the 1833 Act was passed, the evidence taken by Sadler of practices in unregulated mills was strictly speaking irrelevant to any further factory legislation. In 1836, another Ten Hours' Bill was mooted. The Blackburn Standard - a Conservative paper published in a Lancashire milltown - declared its support (and hence implicitly a view that the Factory Commission recommendations had not gone far enough). However, the Standard did not base its support on Sadler's report and was scathing on about those whose arguments for the new Bill relied heavily on the more lurid evidence in Sadler's report: > …However true it may be that the barbarities which it so pathetically and > powerfully deplores were practised some years ago in the woollen mills of > Yorkshire, they are altogether unknown in the present day in the cotton > mills of Lancashire, and the operative classes of society are of course not > so degraded and oppressed as insinuated.
The Commandant-General of the Union Defence Force, Brigadier-General Christiaan Frederick Beyers was opposed to the South African government's decision to undertake offensive operations. He resigned his commission on 15 September 1914, writing "It is sad that the war is being waged against the 'barbarism' of the Germans. We have forgiven but not forgotten all the barbarities committed in our own country during the South African War", referring to the atrocities committed during the Boer War. A nominated senator, General Koos de la Rey, who had refused to support the government in parliament over this issue, associated himself with Beyers. On 15 September they set off together to visit Major JCG (Jan) Kemp in Potchefstroom, who had a large armoury and a force of 2,000 men who had just finished training, many of whom were thought to be sympathetic to the rebels' ideas.
We are heartily grieved at the differences which now subsist > between the parent state and the colonies, and most ardently wish to see > harmony restored, on an equitable basis, and by the most lenient measures > that can be devised by the heart of men. Many of us, and our forefathers, > left our native land, considering it as a kingdom subjected to inordinate > power, and greatly abridged of its liberties. We crossed the Atlantick, and > explored this then uncultivated wilderness, bordering on many nations of > savages, and surrounded by mountains almost inaccessible to any but those > very savages, who have incessantly been committing barbarities and > depredations on us since our first seating the country. These fatigues and > dangers we patiently encountered, supported by the pleasing hope of enjoying > those rights and liberties which have been granted to Virginians and were > denied us in our native country, and of transmitting them inviolate to our > posterity.
The last was completed by his brother, Giovanni Bellini. According to Carlo Ridolfi (who was born 87 years after Bellini's death) in his 1648 history of the Venetian painters: > Bellini made a painting of the head of John the Baptist on a charger, the > saint being revered by the Turks as a prophet. When the picture was brought > before the Sultan, he praised the skill exhibited there, but drew Gentile's > attention nonetheless to an error, which was that the neck stretched out too > far from the head, and as it appeared to him that Gentile appeared > unconvinced, to enable him to see the natural effect, he had a slave brought > to him and had his head chopped off, demonstrating to him how, once > separated from the chest, the neck contracted. Gentile, fearful at such > barbarities, immediately tried in every way to be released from his contract > in case one day he himself should be the victim of such a joke.
A cover of the Lives of the Artists by Giorgio Vasari The Italian artist and critic Giorgio Vasari (1511–1574) first used the term rinascita in his book The Lives of the Artists (published 1550). In the book Vasari attempted to define what he described as a break with the barbarities of Gothic art: the arts (he held) had fallen into decay with the collapse of the Roman Empire and only the Tuscan artists, beginning with Cimabue (1240–1301) and Giotto (1267–1337) began to reverse this decline in the arts. Vasari saw ancient art as central to the rebirth of Italian art. However, only in the 19th century did the French word renaissance achieve popularity in describing the self-conscious cultural movement based on revival of Roman models that began in the late 13th century. French historian Jules Michelet (1798–1874) defined "The Renaissance" in his 1855 work Histoire de France as an entire historical period, whereas previously it had been used in a more limited sense.

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