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45 Sentences With "bones of contention"

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

Jealousy and trust appear to be major bones of contention.
Increasingly, they are bones of contention in lawsuits ranging from business disputes to harassment to defamation.
The main bones of contention are the Bolivian situation, along with Venezuela and, as always, Cuba.
The major bones of contention, we're told -- the cast feels their wardrobe and travel stipends are so low it's laughable.
The Philippines went the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague in 2013 to question that, among other bones of contention.
With the stakes high and the bones of contention abundant, many felt the burgundy passports represented the country's unnecessary subjugation at the hands of Brussels.
The future of the Sisak refinery was one of the bones of contention between the two shareholders as Zagreb primarily focused on saving jobs rather than profitability.
China's ambassador to Manila, Zhao Jianhua, said last Friday a budding bilateral friendship could boost chances of removing one of their biggest bones of contention in the South China Sea.
The forcible conscription of youths into the SDF as well as the fate of thousands imprisoned in their jails have been major bones of contention, according to residents and tribal figures.
I think one of the great problems that social democracy faces is that the great battles of our movement throughout Europe and the world, in history, are not bones of contention any longer.
A truce between Vivendi and Elliott could speed up the creation of a single network operator, a project backed by the CDP but which is one of the main bones of contention between Elliott and Vivendi.
Among those bones of contention are Washington's desire to limit access to its agricultural markets, to impose a so-called sunset clause that could automatically kill NAFTA after five years and proposed changes to dispute-resolution mechanisms.
The aid program did not go altogether smoothly with the IMF delaying the release of aid in early 2017 due to the slow pace of reforms — increasing household gas prices being one of the main bones of contention.
Besides being close friends, Lorca and Xirgu "were part of this gay demimonde, and were as 'out' as you could be in that era," said Andrea Weiss, whose latest documentary, "Bones of Contention," explores lesbian and gay repression in Franco's Spain.
Dominic Raab, a Brexit campaigner who is now minister for courts and justice, said Britain would most likely suggest Britain and the EU could appoint arbitrators and possibly agree a third party to deal with "bones of contention" in future ties.
Now, you know, what happened over the weekend should be a good reason to have reassurance that the lead players are going to want to sit down, negotiate, and address the issues that have been bones of contention in terms of trade.
One of the main bones of contention during the Paris climate talks was a regular five-year "stocktaking" process that would compel countries to adjust their targets in light of new economic or technological circumstances, with China arguing that any such adjustments must be voluntary.
One of the main bones of contention for McMaster is that Trump has largely ignored calls to take a tougher stance on Russia, with the president still challenging the assertion of the U.S. intelligence community that the Kremlin was involved in meddling with the 2016 election.
A truce between Vivendi and Elliott could speed up the creation of a single broadband operator in Italy through the merger of TIM's copper and fiber network with smaller rival Open Fiber, a project backed by the CDP but which has been one of the main bones of contention between the two rivals.
At a summit on November 25th leaders from the 27 remaining member states will discuss and, it is expected, approve the withdrawal agreement drafted by the British government and the European Commission, as well as a political declaration on the future relationship between Britain and the EU. One of the main bones of contention will be fish.
"Bones of Contention" was originally published in the January 28, 2013 issue of The New Yorker.Williams, Paige. "Bones of Contention." New Yorker January 28, 2013: n. pag.
Pearson was featured in the 1995 BBC documentary Bones of Contention.
Pearson and other activists were featured in the 1995 BBC documentary Bones of Contention.
Adam Grzeszak, Polish-Russian Relations: Bones of Contention Piling Up , Polityka, (PDF), 2006.Breaking the Ice?, Warsaw Voice, 20 February 2008. Retrieved 16 May 2008.
It was based on a real life story. The documentary Bones of Contention was released in 2017, and focused on describing everyday life for gays and lesbians during the Franco regime. The movie was written by filmmaker Andrea Weiss.
S.A. Smith, "Bones of Contention: Bolsheviks and the Struggle against Relics 1918–1930." Past & Present Vol. 204: 1, (2009): 156-57 МИХАИЛ ШКАРОВСКИЙ. АНТИРЕЛИГИОЗНАЯ КАМПАНИЯ ИЗЪЯТИЯ МОЩЕЙ В СОВЕТСКОЙ РОССИИFor documents, see Милякова Л.: Отделение Церкви от государства и школы от Церкви в Советской России.
Lewin wrote three books with Richard Leakey. He became a full-time freelance writer in 1989 and concentrated on writing books. In 1989 Roger Lewin won the Royal Society Prizes for Science Books for Bones of Contention. In 2000, Lewin formed Harvest Associates with wife Birute Regine for business consulting.
22-23; Academic colonies. Honi Soit, No. 2, July 1990, pp. 18-19 He has also taken up the cause of protection of Aboriginal sites against development.James Woodford, 'Bones of contention block beach development', Sydney Morning Herald, 17 April 2004 Kamminga is also consultant to the erotic garden and tea house created by Kattai Kamminga in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
Williams' work is included in the 2009 and 2011 editions of The Best American Magazine Writing and the 2003 and 2006 editions of The Best American Crime Writing. Her 2013 New Yorker article "Bones of Contention" explored the black-market fossil trade. The story was expanded into a book titled The Dinosaur Artist, published by the Hachette Book Group in 2018.
In the episode "Bones of Contention", Giardello warns Falsone about the regulations against intimate fraternization among members of the same shift, and Falsone and Ballard agree to stop seeing each other rather than risk discipline or a forced transfer out of Giardello's shift. However, this agreement merely led to their continuing their relationship in secret. The character also appeared in the Law & Order episode "Baby, It's You".
They found that it contained bones: two secondary burials (and the next year one primary burial was uncovered beneath this)."Bones of Contention," Time 8/6/01, p. 49. The next year everyone went back to do more work on the enclosure and the bones it contained and to further survey the graveyard at Qumran, which evolved into the first comprehensive map of the Qumran settlement and adjacent cemetery.
Fleinhardt owned a personally restored 1877 Victorian home which he sold in "Bones of Contention". The character evinces a distaste for number theory and cell phones, but enjoys hiking. Also akin to Feynman, he percusses, but never for pleasure -- he drums away problems. Both he and Charlie are members of the North American Sundial Society, and they have worked together on various contests for the physics department, including a paper airplane contest.
Despite numerous faults of the norms contained in the former order, their failure to ensure confidentiality and efficiency of appeals, they have been transferred to the new order without any changes. One of the bones of contention in the said document is the compulsory censorship of correspondence (with the exception of specific subjects). The CEC of Ukraine, as opposed to the old Correction and Labor Code of Ukraine supposedly banned the censorship replacing it with “review” (art. 113 CEC of Ukraine).
Chambers, Paul, (2002), Bones of Contention, John Murray (Publishers) Ltd, London, p. 249 Furthermore, the authenticity of "Archaeoraptor" would not have been an essential proof for the hypothesis that birds are theropods, as this is sufficiently corroborated by other data; paleontologist Christopher Brochu concluded in November 2001: "That birds are derived theropod dinosaurs is no longer the subject of scholarly dispute."Brochu, Christopher A. (2001), "Progress and future directions in archosaur phylogenetics", Journal of Paleontology: Vol. 75, No. 6, pp.
The first biographical book about Delchev was issued in 1904 by his friend and comrade in arms, the Bulgarian poet Peyo Yavorov.Charles A. Moser, A History of Bulgarian Literature 865–1944; Walter de Gruyter, 2019; , p. 139. The most detailed biography of Delchev in English is written by Mercia MacDermott: "Freedom or Death: The Life of Gotse Delchev".Maria Todorova, Bones of Contention: The Living Archive of Vasil Levski and the Making of Bulgaria's National Hero, Central European University Press, 2009, , p. 77.
According to the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, Michigan's southern boundary should be a line drawn from the southern tip of Lake Michigan east to Lake Erie. Due to errors of cartography, Lake Michigan was charted further north than it really is. This error put Toledo, Ohio and the Maumee River mouth in Ohio. This was one of the bones of contention involved in the “Toledo War”, which was only resolved by Act of Congress, and the related award of the Upper Peninsula to Michigan.
Sweden and Novgorod signed the Treaty of Nöteborg (Pähkinäsaari in Finnish) in 1323, but that did not last long. In 1348 the Swedish king Magnus Eriksson staged a failed crusade against Orthodox "heretics", managing only to alienate his supporters and ultimately lose his crown. The bones of contention between Sweden and Novgorod were the northern coastline of the Gulf of Bothnia and the wilderness regions of Savo in Eastern Finland. Novgorod considered these as hunting and fishing grounds of its Karelian subjects, and protested against the slow infiltration of Catholic settlers from the West.
Later, the devastation of the Black Death weakens the priory and enables the town to win at last its charter as a borough, though conflict with the priory is not quite over. By the time of Column of Fire, the priory is gone, having been dissolved by King Henry VIII. The merchants' rule of the city is complete and uncontested, though they are divided into mutually-antagonistic factions, and one of their bones of contention is control of the former priory building, taking up valuable real estate at the town center. Ultimately, in token of the merchants' total victory, the priory building is itself transformed into a thriving market.
As recently as 1950, Butwal was a minor village on the western bank of Tilottama River (also known as Tinau) The area was a loose settlement which acted as a trading post between the hilly districts of Lumbini zone and the Indian plains. Thus, historically Butwal connected Nepali people with their Indian neighbors. As the British East India Company annexed Awadh from its hereditary rulers while the Shah Dynasty attempted to annex the Terai, Butwal became one of bones of contention leading to the Gurkha War 1814–16. When King Tribhuvan fled to India in 1950 during the revolt against the Rana dynasty he travelled through Butwal.
When Ocampo was appointed chairman of the National Historical Institute (present-day National Historical Commission of the Philippines) and later elected chair of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), then-President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo declared that she was an ardent reader of his newspaper column, commending his writings because he "makes history so approachable." Some academics have critiqued Ocampo for his populist approach towards historiography. In response, Ocampo has since released two compilations of his public lectures Meaning and History focused on Jose Rizal and Bones of Contention on Andres Bonifacio both published in 2001 with the required bibliographic references and footnotes. Nevertheless, Ocampo is considered as one of the most prominent Philippine historians.
One of the main bones of contention is Thomas' excommunication of Lord Gilbert, one of Henry's most loyal stalwarts, for seizing and ordering the killing of a priest who had been accused of sexual indiscretions with a young girl, before the priest can even be handed over for ecclesiastical trial. Gilbert then refused to acknowledge his transgressions and seek absolution. The King has a dramatic secret meeting with the Bishop of London in his cathedral ("I have the Archbishop on my stomach, a big hard lump"). He lays out his plan to remove the troublesome cleric through scandal and innuendo, which the position-conscious Bishop of London quickly agrees to (thus furthering Henry's already deep contempt for church higher-ups).
During the rebellion of the first plebeian secession in 494 BC, which marked the beginning of the Conflict of the Orders between patricians (the aristocrats) and plebeians (the commoners), the plebeian movement instituted and elected its leaders, who soon also came to act as the representatives of the plebs: the plebeian tribunes. It also instituted the assistants of these tribunes (the plebeian aediles) and its own assembly, the Plebeian Council (Concilium Plebis). These plebeian institutions were extra-legal in that they were not recognised by the senate and the Roman state, which were controlled by the patricians. The bones of contention in the Conflict of the Orders were the economic grievances of the poor, the protection of plebeians and, later, power-sharing with the patricians (who monopolised political power) with the rich plebeians.
Rosenbluth's article "Bones of Contention: The Political Economy of Height Inequality", published with Carles Boix in the American Political Science Review, was awarded the 2015 Heinz I. Eulau Award for the best article published in that journal each year. The award committee called their paper "innovative and path-breaking in the extreme", since Rosenbluth and Boix were able to extend data far back beyond World War II to study the origins of inequality. Rosenbluth was also a recipient of the 2011 Victoria Schuck Award from the American Political Science Association, which honors the best book published on the topic of women and politics, in recognition for her book Women, Work & Politics: The Political Economy of Gender Inequality co-authored with Torben Iversen. Rosenbluth has received several other major academic honors.
' – John Ryan, Introduction to A Bash in the Tunnel (1970) John Ryan (1925–92) Ricorso) and formed part of the Envoy / McDaid's pub circle of artistic and literary figures that included Patrick Kavanagh, Anthony Cronin, Brendan Behan, John Jordan, Pearse Hutchinson, J.P. Donleavy and artist Desmond MacNamara who, at the author's request, created the book cover for the first edition of The Dalkey Archive. O'Nolan also contributed to The Bell. He also wrote a column titled Bones of Contention for the Nationalist and Leinster Times under the pseudonym George Knowall; those were collected in the volume Myles Away From Dublin. Most of his later writings were occasional pieces published in periodicals, some of very limited circulation, which explains why his work has only recently come to enjoy the considered attention of literary scholars.
Extreme nationalist circles such as the National Radical Camp grew more outspoken. One of the groups, the Camp of National Unity, combined many nationalists with Sanation supporters and was connected to the new strongman, Marshal Edward Rydz-Śmigły, whose faction of the Sanation ruling movement was increasingly nationalistic.... In the late 1930s, the exile bloc Front Morges united several major Polish anti-Sanation figures, including Ignacy Paderewski, Władysław Sikorski, Wincenty Witos, Wojciech Korfanty and Józef Haller. It gained little influence inside Poland, but its spirit soon reappeared during World War II, within the Polish government-in-exile. Warsaw was one of Europe's chief cities before the Second World War, pictured in 1939 In October 1938, Joachim von Ribbentrop first proposed German-Polish territorial adjustments and Poland's participation in the Anti-Comintern Pact against the Soviet Union.. The status of the Free City of Danzig was one of the key bones of contention.

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