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"bristled" Antonyms

933 Sentences With "bristled"

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

They've also bristled at Trump's past threats at Sessions. Sen.
When I discovered Gozo's appropriation of itako practices, I bristled.
Still, several curators and others have bristled under her leadership.
" It seems like the word Trump bristled at was "hero.
But when our conversation turned to the Rohingya, he bristled.
He bristled at hearing old accusations leveled at him again.
Outside Mr. Jaber's house, the alleys bristled with police cameras.
And not because I bristled at being called an idiot.
Sweden bristled over Mr. Trump's criticism of its refugee policy.
Democrats have bristled over the pace of the confirmation votes.
Players use two types — a brush and a long-bristled brush.
The Saudi government has bristled at international condemnation of its actions.
Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Keith Rowley bristled at the criticism.
Serbian and Bosnian Serb officials bristled at the condition for attendance.
People took notice of the reality star's Insta-heart and bristled.
Congressional Republicans have bristled at Obama's call to end the measure.
On the call, Musk bristled at the mention of safety concerns.
When I pressed Maggic for a timeline, she bristled in response.
He also bristled at suggestions that he favors showmanship over winning.
Ross bristled when asked about how she compares to May-Treanor.
Kiev has bristled at signs of a European rapprochement with Russia.
The Colonial era and beyond bristled with slave rebellions and resistance.
Reached by phone, Chico's mayor, Sean Morgan, bristled at the result.
Barr bristled when he was pressed for additional details by Rep.
Maureen Dowd LAS VEGAS — The Bushes always bristled at the "d" word.
But officials bristled at the idea that expectations had not been met.
But Republicans bristled at suggestions that the families should simply be released.
Biden bristled as Harris repeatedly pressed him on his decades-old position.
But he apparently bristled at the term, and considered himself wholly contemporary.
Players and their union have bristled at Trump's assertion they are unpatriotic.
Rajavi bristled, and Khomeini cracked down with violent force, sending many of
Blizzard bristled, and within hours YouTube pulled Winzen's videos showing his progress.
When prodded about his mostly young, mostly women fan base, Styles bristled.
Anti-aircraft artillery bristled from the beds of rusted-out pickup trucks.
He bristled when asked whether he still had another victory in him.
He's bristled with the Administration's plans for when to pass health care.
President Obama bristled at the rhetoric too during a rally in Florida.
"Well, he wanted to come over to this country," Mr. Trump bristled.
Pruitt reportedly "bristled" when the officials confronted him, according to the Times.
But Maria bristled at the idea that being Dominican meant selling drugs.
The hairs on my arm bristled as I sat behind the wheel.
But city officials bristled at the state's continued criticism over subway financing.
Mr. Sanders has bristled at comparisons between his behavior and the president's.
But when Washington's involvement regards regulations, conservatives in the county have bristled.
"You ask me if it's good if I made it?" she bristled.
Turkey bristled at that — and Bolton is no longer in his job.
But he bristled at a recent description of his music as ideological.
But Mr. Pompeo still bristled at Ms. Kelly's questions about Ms. Yovanovitch.
Ever since, presidents have bristled at what they considered an impossible standard.
It whirled and bristled, as languidly as an anemone in the sea.
Yet, neighbor after neighbor in Key West bristled when I mentioned Sen.
Though others might have bristled, Tipsarevic has learned to embrace the situation.
The Saudis bristled at American support for Israel but backed a moderate line.
I suspected drugs but when I asked, he bristled and denied the accusation.
But as her career unfolded, Ms. León bristled at attempts to define her.
Most bristled at the deal's initial two-week deadline (which was later relaxed).
I bristled at the idea that dead people were anything other than dead.
Some European politicians have long bristled at Mr Erdogan's electioneering in their cities.
The North Korean dictator had also bristled a talk of denuclearizing his country.
But ordinary Saudis have bristled at the austerity, causing the government to backtrack.
When I asked Neitzel about Eric's case, he bristled and refused to answer.
In the past, Mexican officials had bristled at the idea of extraditing him.
Over dinner at T.G.I. Friday's, Fike bristled when their conversation turned to politics.
The Polish government has bristled at suggestions of anti-Semitism in the past.
Prairie grasses of muted yellows and olives bristled under a heartbreakingly blue sky.
They bristled at suggestions that slipping past a winless team cheapened the victory.
In the interview, Cardinal Wuerl bristled at the mention of Cardinal Law's name.
Thorgy, who admitted Ms. Nicks was one of her biggest inspirations, nevertheless bristled.
Critics have bristled at his tendency to make grand proclamations in minor cases.
But she bristled at the idea that the Rohingya might be victims, too.
When the topic came up in a 2017 television interview, Mr. Sanders bristled.
I liked the feeling of togetherness, yet bristled at the program's authoritative overtones.
I asked what kind of plant a branch is called and she bristled.
Obama, who bristled at the traditional confines of the first lady role, Mrs.
But some board members bristled at the biennial ritual, especially as service deteriorated.
But oil giants like BP, ExxonMobil and Shell have bristled at the idea.
Bannon imagined himself a sort of quasi-president and the actual President bristled.
Bolton bristled at that and refused to defend the president's policy on television.
The Vermont independent has twice now bristled at questions about his personal wealth.
I bristled, I stiffened, I ballooned to twice my natural size with indignation.
Both America and Taiwan have bristled at China's attempt to strong-arm the airlines.
Moon also bristled at Trump's threats of taking unilateral military action against North Korea.
Lawyers on both sides previously asked for two hours each, which Ellis bristled at.
When asked about ramping up to include more robots in the factory, Palmer bristled.
Her superstructure bristled with antennae—some long and pointy, some sleek, white and domed.
Trump has also reportedly bristled at the negative press coverage of the diplomatic effort.
Or maybe they bristled because they knew this version was going to be good.
But the North has bristled at the idea that it is beholden to China.
When the monitors told Wilcher the infirmary did not have enough nurses, he bristled.
He also slashed the city's payroll and bristled at wage hikes for city contractors.
Using a dust mop, soft-bristled broom, or vacuum regularly is the first step.
Kellyanne Conway has bristled when asked by reporters about her husband's outspokenness about Trump.
He also produced two naval histories of World War I that bristled with drama.
Mr. Ingels bristled at the notion that the development would further gentrify the neighborhood.
Mr. Pérez bristled at the notion that re-engaging with Mr. Trump was futile.
In Cooperstown this weekend, Selig still bristled at any possible complicity on that front.
Barr during his testimony Tuesday bristled at Democrats' scrutiny of the administration's legal position.
She bristled at the interviewer's suggestion that her view was uncommon among women in Hollywood.
Back in Washington, national security officials bristled at the large presence Ivanka assumed while overseas.
David Cohen, CLEAR's Chief Administrative Officer, bristled at the notion that the service was elitist.
I bristled at the query, probably because I was worried that it might be true.
Appearing on Sunday Night on Australia's Channel 7, Letourneau bristled as she defended her relationship.
China has bristled at the charges and has put is own duties on U.S. goods.
While privately spiritual, she bristled at others' efforts to impose their own convictions upon her.
He derided female comedians and bristled at criticism of his approach to the MDA telethon.
"He was making a fool of me, and he did it on purpose," she bristled.
But she also bristled at pharmacological interventions, dealing with her own challenges through natural treatments.
And some bristled at his health initiatives, calling Mr. Bloomberg's New York a Nanny State.
The two-time NBA scoring champion bristled at the idea that he was ever passive.
Still, none of her colleagues have so publicly bristled at the egg on their faces.
But he bristled at the idea that the Yankees were giving up on this season.
But a senior Senate Republican aide bristled at the notion that McConnell fumbled the ball.
Conservatives bristled at Boehner's efforts to push through critical bills, arguing their input was minimized.
In those days, the rooftops of South and East London still bristled with unauthorized antennas.
Trump has bristled at the criticism — and so have his supporters with big media megaphones.
Obama said that he welcomed her advocacy, but he sometimes bristled when she voiced it.
The letters column of the Mount Desert Islander, the local paper, bristled with angry screeds.
The former associate said the partners bristled at the efforts to advocate for the candidate.
Many in the tech industry, however, have bristled at the early contours of Pai's plan.
But she bristled when describing a fellow comic who said pregnancy was becoming her trademark.
The idea was for Salvador to do something similar, but he bristled at the notion.
The newspaper said that McConnell has bristled at the president's attacks on his Senate colleagues.
Sabathia bristled at the idea, thinking he would stay with the Indians his entire career.
Exaggerated lacy vinyl skirts bloomed around bony hips, and oily, iridescent feathers bristled at the neck.
But Trump has bristled at the policy, ignoring it and provoking China before even taking office.
Like many orthodontia related items, toothbrushes (especially the bristled side) are no good for achieving orgasm.
India has long bristled at any suggestion of third-party involvement in tackling the Kashmir issue.
Still, Auriemma bristled at the suggestion that this game was "a litmus test" for his team.
The purge has gone down better with ordinary Saudis, who have bristled at the government's austerity.
Chinese officials and experts have long bristled at any perceived attempt to contain a rising China.
The desire for her, coded by the green paisley, transferred over to fuzzy leaves, bristled vines.
Duterte has bristled at that criticism and hit back at those questioning him over human rights.
For example, many commanders bristled at the limits President Obama imposed on the use of force.
Republicans have in the past bristled at Shaub's tactics and believe he is politicizing his office.
Collectively, they have bristled at what they view as favored treatment for corporations under the law.
In an interview with Reuters earlier this year, Trump bristled at the idea he doesn't exercise.
Not surprisingly, those qualities bristled throughout the brawny, intense account he led of Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony.
Republicans bristled at the parliamentary maneuvers, including the appearance in the Senate chambers of Lt. Gov.
Greenberg bristled at a media conference on Monday when asked how the NRL found itself vulnerable.
As a result, the SEC bristled, leveled a fine and called for changes in the board.
Duke officials bristled at suggestions that the school is insensitive to the needs of its neighbors.
But Abrams bristled at the notion at the time, which Biden advisers thought was poor form.
His wife, Ms. Liao, a former cleaner at a mall, bristled at questions about their search.
Some deaf people bristled at the implication that they needed to be "fixed" with an implant.
When Sharapova was questioned by reporters after defeating Justine Henin-Hardenne for the title, she bristled.
According to Kelly, Pompeo confronted her after he bristled at her questions in a taped interview.
This is a capsule from the Clinton impeachment, during which senators bristled at being called jurors.
Bush bristled, but took the advice and lay low; he won the White House in 1988.
They were there to interview embattled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro when he bristled at the questions.
Federer visibly bristled this week when asked whether this was an exhibition or something more meaningful.
Meanwhile, the unions have bristled at Saccone, who did not return the AFL-CIO's candidate questionnaire.
Other bank regulators bristled at the CFPB's arrival, and agencies engaged in turf wars over responsibilities.
He said he had "several calls" with Trump, but bristled at repeated questions about their relationship.
Use a dense, short-bristled brush to blend and buff the color into a soft, rosy glow.
President Donald Trump and members of his administration have bristled in recent days over the market's decline.
He bristled at the restrictions they wanted on him, and recommendations that he be accompanied by agents.
Many critics bristled at Becker's market-driven logic, which seemed to reduce people to cold, calculating machines.
Religious organizations have consistently bristled at that policy, arguing that they're being forced to contradict their beliefs.
Many in the Amhara National Democratic Movement, the coalition's Amhara wing, also bristled at the TPLF's power.
So it is understandable that China has bristled at suggestions that it is veering into such territory.
Trump has long bristled at the special counsel investigation into possible collusion between his campaign and Russia.
Trump already bristled at Saturday Night Live's impression of "Spicey," aka White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.
The challenge is so daunting that government attorneys have bristled every time it's come up in court.
Alderson bristled at the published suggestion that Collins's bullpen decisions had contributed to the team's physical setbacks.
Chicago is a great, quintessential American city, despite the singular narrative we've all heard and bristled at.
Mr. Sessions served there for 20 years, and his former colleagues have bristled at Mr. Trump's attacks.
After the seizures were publicized, the Chinese government bristled at suggestions that it had been somehow involved.
Chris Christie of New Jersey bristled at a woman who questioned his administration's response to record flooding.
They bristled in particular at the decision by the Provisional I.R.A. to give up its weapons entirely.
White immigrants bristled, and right-wing groups, like the National Front, began to march through the neighborhood.
" Trump bristled, insisting, "No Lindsey, it was a sign of strength that some people just don't understand!
Democrats have repeatedly bristled at Miller's involvement, arguing he isn't a constructive force in the immigration talks.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo bristled this week at a local reporter's questions about the impeachment hearings.
Instead, they bristled at an attempt by Mr. Romney to gather enough signatures to circumvent the convention.
Kitten heels were sharp as spikes, studs bristled from shoulders and sleeves, pockets were heavy with jewels.
But experts and Democrats have bristled at Trump's use of a national security issue for political fundraising.
But, when he testified on Tuesday, he bristled at being lumped together with the other two men.
Cruz, appearing in a later interview, bristled at suggestions that the relief effort had been well-coordinated.
Some bristled at the announcement purely because Quantum Break had previously been announced as an Xbox exclusive.
Reporters Committee Executive Director Bruce Brown, calling the attorney general's words "deeply troubling," bristled at the accusation.
Better still, it comes with a soft-bristled eyeshadow brush and a mirror, making it a wise investment.
No one supported the militia's nutty tactics, but many bristled at federal land management in this rural area.
President Ashraf Ghani has bristled at the Trump administration's activism on the peace front; others are more welcoming.
Not surprisingly, these memos contained some descriptions that people working and living in the White House bristled at.
Schiff was needling Trump about his television watching habits -- a subject Trump has bristled at in the past.
They have sometimes also bristled at Trump's policies on trade, but have backed his regulatory and tax policies.
France and other US allies have also bristled at Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.
He has also bristled at reprimands from Trump, saying that he doesn't "need this," according to the Times.
Russian leaders have bristled at the idea that they might qualify for inclusion on the terror-sponsors list.
He bristled at the criticism he had heard about Trump supporters, saying they were wrongly maligned as racist.
Conservatives have bristled at the process, arguing that it blocks out their priorities and maintains the status quo.
He would bristle at that statement, which is why he bristled at Ursuta's work, and panned the show.
Some business leaders bristled, but others began talking about their companies' "purpose" in mission statements and official documents.
In February, Iraqi politicians bristled after Mr. Trump said American troops in Iraq would monitor and pressure Iran.
But Mr. Simpson has bristled at the idea that the dossier is some kind of liberal fever dream.
But she also bristled at the "scarlet letter" Carver, and by extension its students, had been branded with.
And when pressed about whether the administration was separating families at the border for the deterrent, Nielsen bristled.
While Russia appeared eager to dial town tensions, Turkey bristled with fury at the killing of its troops.
Mr. Sanders, of Vermont, has bristled at the opportunity he is missing to deliver his closing argument himself.
A spokesman for George Norcross, Daniel Fee, bristled at the depiction of Ms. Altman as an independent reformer.
Some Democrats questioned the stated threat posed by Iraq and bristled at President George W. Bush's broad request.
Still, even avowedly left-leaning labor leaders bristled at what they perceived as the activists' naïveté or arrogance.
And employees bristled at a mandated segment that featured Mr. Livingston, which ran on Sinclair stations in March.
It was a welcome sight for the Knicks players, some of whom bristled at playing in the triangle.
In 1991, when Congress questioned whether Washington should allow a $682 million arms sale to UAE, Clarke bristled.
The short answer was yes, but Mr. Barr bristled at the suggestion he was hostile to the bill.
Simpson was leaving his lawyer's office Friday when he bristled at the story, saying it was totally untrue.
"I'm not a fuckin' popsicle," bristled the muscular Belgian, who relocated to Arizona to be closer to People Unlimited.
Murkowski, too, bristled at the secretive deliberations and drafting of legislation to overhaul one-sixth of the American economy.
All you need is a natural bristled brush, a circular brushing motion and enough time to enjoy the experience.
And later, Joe bristled when she said she thought he'd have a mistress in Italy if they stayed married.
The Vermont senator bristled repeatedly at Hillary Clinton's attacks, which she dealt smoothly, never seeming to lose her cool.
It doesn't look good: Switzerland bristled at the fact that it wasn't alerted of the probe, demanding an explanation.
WikiLeaks has bristled against complaints of Russian involvement and its failure to redact personal information from either data dump.
But his lawyers and other allies have bristled at the idea of placing the president in Mueller's direct path.
In addition to delays in funding the government, Republicans have bristled over the slow pace of confirming Trump's nominations.
Yet Mr. Lew, in an interview, bristled at the implication that until now his stewardship had been low-key.
Fox News anchors bristled at the decision, suggesting it did a disservice to the news division, candidates and voters.
Many shoppers, who may have bristled at first, have grown used to the idea of reusable bags, advocates say.
" On Twitter Wednesday, Trump bristled at Romney's op-ed and told the incoming senator to "be a team player.
And they bristled Friday when it was suggested that maybe the US could just slide back into the deal.
And by the time her publicist gently nudged us to wrap things up, I almost bristled at the intrusion.
When asked whether he's concerned that some people consider the show to be their primary news source, Oliver bristled.
Critics found him more of a tormentor, and Gorsuch in March bristled at his portrayal of the nominee's views.
And Ms. Mark-Viverito bristled at Mr. Trump's plans to occupy a stretch of Fifth Avenue while in office.
Some of the executives bristled when Ms. Spar brought in Mr. Silver, who had worked with her at Barnard.
She bristled, thinking that I was implying that she wasn't putting in enough effort to look for her son.
Poland's right-wing government has bristled at European criticism of its moves to exercise greater control of the courts.
But she bristled at the idea of pushing more difficult books on toddlers before they were ready for them.
When he questioned something she ate, even if it was a simple, "Are you O.K. with that?" she bristled.
But around the South in recent years, many others bristled at the idea that Confederate history was being erased.
The normally easygoing Collins has bristled lately over trial procedures, after casting several preliminary votes against witnesses and evidence.
At her Thursday news conference, Ms. Pelosi bristled when reporters pressed her on whether an impeachment investigation was underway.
Pastry aficionados have bristled at the shortcut, and household pie mavens may feel it undermines a hard-earned skill.
"LaPierre bristled at the thought of openly supporting Trump so early," the Post reported the firm's court filing said.
A GOP source familiar with the matter says Republican leadership has bristled at some of his messages on Twitter.
Duterte has spurned the US since he took office and bristled at US criticism of his human-rights record.
While Holtmann respected Middle Tennessee's bracket-busting reputation, he bristled at the suggestion that Butler could not match up.
The Legislature bristled at Rokita's suggestion, which would have given his office new power and disrupted lawmakers' safe seats.
In 2012, legislators made national headlines after they bristled against the use of sea-level rise projections in coastal planning.
Castro bristled at a rare news conference on Monday when asked by a U.S. journalist about detention of political opponents.
Government officials have bristled, however, at the idea that they are negotiating with the captives or contemplating paying the ransom.
He bristled at the National Park Service when official photos showed his Inauguration Day crowd was smaller than Mr. Obama's.
Erdogan has also bristled at German condemnation of the arrest of a German-Turkish journalist, whom he calls a spy.
In the early days of Tesla, he bristled when media coverage shunned him in favor of then-CEO Martin Eberhard.
But Patrick has also for the majority of his political career bristled at how public life has exposed his family.
Some newsrooms have bristled at the move, calling it a heavy-handed response that conflates political journalism with politics itself.
It was a noise that set one's teeth on edge and bristled the hair at the back of one's neck.
Soon it was Bette who was relegated to taking the "shopgirl" and "slattern" roles that Joan had bristled at playing.
Eons ago, when I saw "Slava's Snowshow" Off Broadway at the Union Square Theater, I bristled all the way through.
When an attendee at another house party in Exeter, New Hampshire, asked her about media reports about that, Gabbard bristled.
Meanwhile, Saudis bristled angrily at the negative media coverage and the highly critical commentary from American politicians and religious figures.
Others bristled at the requirement to abandon longtime sponsors at the very moment they would be entering the international spotlight.
Dip a soft-bristled brush into the solution and gently scrub from the outside of the stain toward the center.
Rather than showing some introspection, he bristled at the idea that his call against "millionaires and billionaires" might include himself.
While their early years were full of passion (and a lot of great meals) he bristled as her career blossomed.
During the 1986 race for governor of Vermont, Bernie Sanders bristled at the popularity of the Democratic incumbent, Madeleine Kunin.
At the time, Smith bristled at the idea that BuzzFeed was at any greater risk than other traditional news outlets.
Those voters have bristled at Trump's hard-line rhetoric on immigration and criticism of a federal judge of Mexican descent.
Someone said that to me and I kind of bristled at that, but I'm starting to kind of embrace it.
If you need to remove dirt or debris from the Lightning connector, use a clean and dry soft-bristled brush.
Kelly bristled at the Rubashkin issue, and "wanted to get the case off his desk," according to a former colleague.
Mr. Maguire, a retired Navy vice admiral and former counterterrorism official, bristled at what he called attacks on his integrity.
But the partnership between the civil rights movement and the McDonald's Corporation bristled with compromises and contradictions from the beginning.
He bristled on Tuesday at what he called false reports that he had hit the links amid the Iraq crisis.
Asked at the Monday news conference by a Malian journalist why the French couldn't stop the massacres, Mr. Macron bristled.
Some of the largest oil and gas companies bristled at the idea that they would agree to a similar deal.
Lawmakers have bristled over the Trump administration's handling of the coronavirus and have said the administration's request is too low.
In the days before the election, General Flynn's Twitter account bristled with all-caps exclamations about bizarre Clinton conspiracy theories.
Nunes bristled at Hill's remarks, pointing to the panel's report last year concluding that Russia interfered in the 2023 election.
He bristled at the idea of returning the chimpanzees to Nigeria, saying an exhibit was already being planned for them.
Many Democrats bristled when Tom Steyer spent his way onstage by using social media ads to attract small-dollar donors.
Mr. Adès's thorny, modernist music, played with crackling precision and color by the orchestra, bristled with manic, almost madcap, energy.
The two ride-hail companies have bristled over new regulations in New York, Uber's largest market in the United States.
Ms. Netrebko, Mr. Beczala and Ms. Rachvelishvili claimed those roles so tenaciously that the drama bristled with passion and danger.
Mr. Miller, however, bristled at the suggestion that he was a Bannon creation, a perception Mr. Bannon himself often encouraged.
North Korea's leader bristled at that, since Libya's dictator was toppled with Western support years after he relinquished his arsenal.
The My Critter Catcher snaps up bugs with its bristled head and then releases the unharmed insects them into the wild.
" Rubio bristled, and when Jones asked if he was going to call security, Rubio responded: "I'll take care of you myself.
But, as the West bristled at human rights violations and electoral irregularities in Cambodia, relations between Hun Sen and China strengthened.
Jordan bristled at the suggestion that she and Little share policy positions, and she criticized his involvement in health care issues.
Or you might otherwise be thinking, Go on... Over 438,000 people on Twitter had their interests piqued and their curiosities bristled.
One of the things that we bristled at this week is the suggestion there was a coup under way in Venezuela.
It's possible that Netflix bristled at giving away too much control to Apple, which could then choose which shows were promoted.
I bristled a little at this interference — the children are on the show — but I said I would think about it.
When she seemed to be suggesting creditors were essentially legal loan sharks, Joe Biden—of the credit-card state, Delaware—bristled.
Many officers bristled under his leadership, and Mr. Berdecia said the new rules would serve as a check on that authority.
But he bristled at suggestions that he had ever taken a fall and said his injuries were proofs of his honesty.
Before the Air Force rolled out the Pitch Day series, Roper bristled at the notion that critics might question the process.
Trump has publicly and privately bristled at Mueller's investigation, which he has called a "witch hunt" intended to undermine his presidency.
Mr. Pruitt bristled when the officials — four career E.P.A. employees and one Trump administration political appointee — confronted him, the people said.
The Mexican people have bristled at Trump's heated rhetoric throughout his campaign, and Trump has little experience on the world stage.
In an interview this year, Mr. Trump bristled at the idea, saying he would never want to weaken America's leverage. Mrs.
Bauer bristled at Avenatti's attorney asking to delay the case in order to wait for a ruling on a different motion.
Pasolini is an unexpected muse for a fashion designer; as a committed Marxist, he would likely have bristled at the connection.
Democrats have repeatedly bristled at Miller's involvement in the immigration talks, arguing he isn't a constructive force in the immigration talks.
Schiff bristled at the fact that Nunes did not share the information with him before updating reporters and the White House.
He and some others at the Caracas highway sit-in on Monday morning bristled at opposition leaders' calls for non-violence.
" Some epidemiologists have also bristled at the government's reliance on a private firm of behavioral scientists, known as the "nudge unit.
Dr. Dunn bristled at the question, before gamely pointing out that many of these species are, or could be, extremely useful.
On the one hand, his Western, liberal arts-educated self bristled at the idea of any potential censorship of individual expression.
He has quarreled with multiple reporters at the briefings and bristled when they pressed him about his handling of the crisis.
Shar bristled at Chris' claims she hit his daughter, Mariah, last month and left a razor blade cut on her forehead.
China also bristled last year when Australia decided to ban technology by Chinese company Huawei from its 5G mobile networks. 4.
That's why hospitals have bristled at these broad recommendations, asking government leaders to trust them to evaluate their situations and needs.
Women bristled at the thought of pulling out a perfume bottle that looked like a lighter and spraying themselves in public.
So he bristled when Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader, brusquely cut him off at the end of the Iraq debate.
It's curious that Barbara's reaction to this, especially considering the way she's bristled at Diane's inclusion in the past, isn't addressed.
Additionally, the article revealed how university officials bristled at Falwell's early and ardent support for Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign.
While much of the world bristled with anxiety as tensions escalated between Washington and Pyongyang, the president seemed more than relaxed.
However, when asked in a news conference if he understood the criticism from Kelly, who he has not met, Infantino bristled.
The resolution&aposs author, Midwestern Seminary president Jason Allen, bristled at the notion that wives should endure abuse to save their marriages.
The Fed has bristled at the proposal, arguing that the proposal limits its power to revive the economy in moments of crisis.
In August, Patrick bristled at a question at the Texas Tribune Festival about what he felt Hillary Clinton did wrong in 2016.
But at Tuesday's rally, he bristled at media reports that — correctly — pointed out his denouncement came days after the violence took place.
I have always bristled at the idea that Obama's pop culture savvy is genius, or central to his appeal, or something similar.
In an interview, Bottoms bristled at the suggestion that she was supporting Biden because she feared that a black candidate couldn't win.
Over the past few months, the gun group and March for Our Lives have bristled against each other online and at rallies.
"I won not because of Russia, not because of anybody but myself," he bristled after former President Jimmy Carter called him illegitimate.
GOP leaders shake their heads, prepare to choose Trump bristled, accusing Cruz of having flip-flopped on ethanol subsidies for political expediency.
Bush regularly bristled at the idea that he needed to change stylistically or put on a "performance" at the all-important debates.
A Russian journalist had the temerity to question whether, at 30, Rooney's powers might be on the wane and the captain bristled.
Pyongyang has long bristled at American bomber flights from Guam, which could retaliate against a North Korean nuclear strike within several hours.
Andrew M. Cuomo and his staff have bristled at the suggestion that they had not acted aggressively enough to address the problem.
She conceded that Wiegert had "warped views on immigrants" but bristled at the implication that working with him tainted her own efforts.
Fila bristled at the implication that his firm had filed the cases for any reason but the best interest of the client.
She emphasized that nobody put more expectations on her than herself, but she bristled at observations about her movement on the court.
Industry experts bristled at the notion that the duties on European vintages would benefit American winemakers, as President Donald Trump has said.
The interior minister, Miguel Angel Osorio Chong, bristled on Wednesday when reporters asked whether the government had somehow let Mr. Duarte escape.
And he bristled when Mr. Wallace asked about the deaths of political rivals, saying, essentially, that American politicians had been assassinated, too.
Some agencies have bristled at the loss of control and complained that OATH hearing officers are too sympathetic, Mr. Del Valle said.
Phone makers, particularly Apple, had bristled at Qualcomm's royalties, which could be as high as 5 percent of a handset's wholesale price.
Airlines have bristled at efforts by officials to get passenger data to track potential travelers who have been infected with the virus.
The normally laid-back Boone bristled when a questioner, paraphrasing Yogi Berra, proposed that it was getting late early around Yankee Stadium.
But Mr. Clinton bristled during the NBC News interview when asked whether he felt he had done enough to address the scandal.
Groups affiliated with the religious right, meanwhile, have bristled at Puzder's use of bikini-clad women in racy ads for his restaurants.
Before his emergency surgery, Sanders kept a breakneck campaign schedule and bristled at questions about his formerly raspy voice and his stamina.
Senior agents, who for years had been resistant to leaving the field for HQ tours, bristled at the offered quid pro quo.
Schumer has called the GOP Senate a "legislative graveyard" and bristled at the charge that he was the one slowing things down.
Ms. Le Pen bristled at such questions from Mr. Poutou and other candidates, asking at one point whether she was being interrogated.
Tea dresses bristled with three-dimensional posies of baby's breath, and negligee gowns cut on the bias bloomed with embroidered poppy appliqués.
In 2008 he bristled when a writer for The Herald of Glasgow used the phrase "story arcs" in talking about the series.
A number of Republicans bristled over Trump's accusations on Russia, though the House GOP leaders who negotiated the sanctions package were silent.
When the idea of tanking the rest of this season was brought up, he bristled — but not without maintaining his Midwestern pleasantness.
Each familiar pink tube comes with a soft-bristled brush that evenly coats every last lash, resulting in extreme volume and length.
Aides have also bristled at Gabbard's attacks but argued there simply was not adequate time in the debate format to answer them.
Instead, use a dry cotton swab or a soft-bristled toothbrush to remove any wax or other debris from the speaker mesh.
At Vogue, Ms. Wintour called her General Winston, and as any general might, Ms. Winston Wolkoff bristled at not receiving proper decoration.
Their songs were mostly about love and relationships, but told through literary images that bristled with meaning outside what was actually said.
With a round, soft-bristled and slightly wet brush, grab the section of hair just behind the bun and tug it straight up.
Interested in art rather than domesticity, she bristled at the predictable lifestyle of affluence and left married life, as it turned out, permanently.
In a CNN town hall, he bristled when anchor Chris Cuomo brought up his past support for government seizures of major American industries.
The move also got a stamp of approval from Mr. de Blasio, who had bristled at how the closing was handled last year.
As experts argued that military officials would disobey even a commander-in-chief's unlawful order -- as Trump's torture decision would be -- Trump bristled.
Even altered by the hand of Bentley, these images represent beautiful ghosts from a winter that bristled the air over a century ago.
The Bavarian CSU has long bristled at Merkel's migrant stance and insisted on a limit of 200,000 refugees per year, which she rejects.
On CNN's "New Day" this week, Kasich bristled at the suggestion that his decision to keep running for president is to Rubio's detriment.
Trump has dismissed and bristled at the constant glare of scrutiny on his staff, his family and himself where it comes to Russia.
And privately, plenty of GOP strategists have bristled at the Graham's suggestion that the time has come to build a coalition around Cruz.
Just this week, Sanders's campaign bristled at Harris's rollout of its own health care plan, which it called "Medicare-for-all" as well.
From Italian Futurism to German Expressionism, many avant-garde artists bristled at bourgeois culture and sought to express something more dangerous and vital.
After Father Farrell bristled publicly at the city's actions, he was questioned by city officials at a government hearing and charged with libel.
Williams, for his part, sidestepped questions about the inquiry last week but bristled at any suggestion that it had adversely affected his health.
Jefferson bristled at the pomp and circumstance of the French court where he served as American minister and thought himself a humbler man.
She said that while then-President Barack Obama supported the stenographers' work, she found Trump bristled at the concept while she was there.
Despite her storied college résumé — Cash had won two national titles at Connecticut — some veterans bristled at the attention given to the newcomer.
Mattis bristled at critics who called it a "political stunt," but there is scant evidence to suggest he was happy about Trump's decision.
Trump has also bristled at Mueller's role in the Russia investigation, and has reportedly sought, at least twice, to remove him from office.
But he bristled at the notion that his company required special regulation, or that it had stalled or impeded regulation in the past.
Mr. Aronofsky bristled at the suggestion that the screen dynamic might be perceived as mirroring that of auteur and megastar in real life.
Mr. Ponte and Mr. de Blasio have bristled at the suggestion of deliberate misuse or that Mr. Ponte had been forced to resign.
Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican majority leader, likewise bristled when Mr. Trump cut in during methodical presentations in the Oval Office.
But Mr. Plepler bristled at the notion that there was a rivalry between the network he runs and the well-funded digital upstart.
However, market leaders themselves have bristled at suggestions to shut down trading in hopes that a break can tame some of the volatility.
Those reports have bothered the first-time candidate, who has bristled at efforts to restrain the bombastic rhetoric that helped fuel his rise.
The Senate is expected to vote to acquit Trump even though some moderate Republicans have bristled over McConnell's reflexive support for the president.
Critics, reported to include Senator Dianne Feinstein, have bristled at the arrival downtown of high-rises like the Millennium Tower and Salesforce Tower.
Defenders of the classical tradition bristled at the hiring of the Spanish contemporary choreographer Nacho Duato in 2014, and his tenure remained troubled.
But Stivers bristled at that characterization, saying Costello lacked the "intestinal fortitude" to face the challenge of new congressional boundaries in the state.
Democrats have bristled at that logic, arguing that the voters picked Obama for a four-year term and that the Senate should act.
Mario Cuomo's oldest son, Andrew, is the current governor of New York and has also bristled at references to mobsters in pop culture.
Trey Gowdy on Sunday bristled at President Donald Trump's attorney John Dowd calling for the Justice Department to end the special counsel probe.
In a few of this year's most memorable moments, older works bristled with the fresh energy and ideas of new dancers and collaborators.
Bolsonaro bristled at what he viewed as a colonial overstep and retaliated with what Macron called "extraordinarily rude" comments about his wife, Brigitte.
But Democrats have bristled at Trump's proposals, which they argue contain so-called "poison pills" — like curbing legal immigration — that they cannot support.
I listened to the message: "Kelly, it&aposs imperative that you call us back right away," and bristled at the formality of it.
Acting Administrator Daniel Elwell bristled when members of Congress asked him why other countries had acted sooner by proactively pulling it from service.
Money from the Gulf flooded in, funding gleaming new mosques with copper roofs and chrome fittings that bristled incongruously against squalid mountain villages.
Some have lauded Lil B for speaking so forcefully, while others bristled at what they perceived to be broad generalizations about white people.
Mario Cuomo's oldest son, Andrew, is the current governor of New York and has also bristled at references to mobsters in pop culture.
The secretary of state bristled last week when asked to reflect on how the lessons of the Iran deal applied to North Korea.
Opponents of the executive order bristled at the notion that just because a small number of people were affected that it didn't matter.
And when Manafort teased a shift on Trump's Muslim ban proposal, Trump bristled at the suggestion and said his adviser must have been misquoted.
Brennan bristled at Trump's public displays of contempt for the intelligence community and said Trump needed to understand his words could undermine national security.
When Thibodeau was fired, Butler bristled at his new coach Fred Hoiberg's easygoing manner, and didn't hesitate to share his opinions with the media.
Gantz also bristled at Netanyahu's insistence that he negotiate with a fully-formed right-wing political alliance, rather than just with Netanyahu's Likud party.
Trump bristled at Sessions' recusal, which he blames for the appointment of former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel in the Russia investigation.
Though Democrats stress they want to secure the border, they've bristled at allowing a concrete structure or including more funding without an immigration deal.
At one lake I drove past, the cypress trees—the last remnants of the wetlands that once dominated the region—bristled with brown needles.
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump invoked the people of Pittsburgh to defend his climate change decision Thursday, and the city's mayor bristled in response.
Clinton bristled when asked why she would not release the transcripts of three speeches for which she was reportedly paid $675,000 by Goldman Sachs.
By most all accounts, Kim bristled at the request, and both leaders walked away from the talks before a planned lunch and signing ceremony.
Beer, burgers and bourbon is the mantra, and beer aficionados gaze raptly at a list bristled with exotica, like birders ogling a precious sighting.
But that hasn't stopped the wishful thinking from some who bristled at Trump's attacks on a Hispanic judge, worrying he had gone too far.
A young man named Ali, who wanted to keep a pencil line of a beard along his jawbone, still bristled at the ISIS rules.
For obvious reasons, then, Canada and Mexico bristled at the tariffs, and it became a major sticking point during the NAFTA renegotiations last year.
Some have bristled at the proposed tax, given already high tax rates in the state and a budget surplus of more than $21 billion.
I'm assuming, from the little I know about you and the little conversation we've had, that you must have bristled about some of that.
IOC president Thomas Bach bristled at the tribunal's ruling, calling it "disappointing" and declaring that it wasn't enough to admit them to the games.
Mr. Trump has often dismissed the Russian hacking story as "fake news" and bristled at any implication that Mr. Putin had helped him win.
Many Italian-Americans have long bristled at their tribe's portrayal in popular culture as consisting primarily of Mafia bosses, thugs, goons and Frank Sinatra.
Salzburg, Austria, has been home to classical-music intrigues since Mozart, its most famous native son, bristled under the employ of its prince-archbishop.
Beijing has bristled at the Modi government's public embrace of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader whom it regards as a dangerous splittist.
Mr. Silberstein said he had bristled when he first heard Ms. Warren would stop doing events like the dinner he had held for her.
Touchy about being caricatured as a flighty tycoon, Mr. Bloomberg bristled at any implication that he was flirting with a run for the attention.
From the beginning, Pompeo has chafed at the Department's penchant for leaks to the press and has bristled at the more independent-minded diplomats.
In addition, they bristled at 2018 proposed changes which introduced a so-called "accounting prong" that extended the scope of the rule even further.
Trump has bristled privately and publicly at Mueller's investigation, and speculation has swirled in recent months that the president could dismiss Rosenstein or Mueller.
Mr. Ghani has bristled at the Americans' decision to negotiate directly with the Taliban, despite the insurgents' having refused to talk to his government.
Pompeo bristled at a question about why the words "verifiable" and "irreversible" were not in the summit joint statement, in the context of denuclearization.
EARLIER this year, a crowd of patriotic Indian students bristled when Arvind Subramanian, the government's chief economic adviser, showed them a slide with two charts.
Reminded that Democrats say he is playing politics with the court, Mr. Portman bristled, insisting no one knows how the presidential election will turn out.
When Google said that not sharing photographs of your friends made you "kind of a terrible person" at this year's I/O keynote, I bristled.
Lundstrom, who said he last saw Prince a month ago at a church service on March 23, bristled at a question about Prince's medical condition.
In a sign of Pompeo's ability to remain in Trump's good graces, the President publicly bristled at Bolton, not him, after the aborted Iran strike.
A study by the London School of Economics found that 69% of newspaper articles that attacked Mr Corbyn bristled about his looks, clothing or habits.
The prime minister, a former general who has dictatorial powers after toppling a civilian government in 2014, has bristled at the notion of canceling Songkran.
In James's defense, Blatt might have better acknowledged the conceit of American (or N.B.A.) exceptionalism, and not bristled whenever questioned about his league rookie status.
The Khans bristled at that suggestion and, in numerous television appearances over the weekend, said Trump was ignorant about Islam and about their family's sacrifice.
The idea that fashion can act as an armor and translator to those unfamiliar with distant cultures is (still) a novel, and sometimes bristled, idea.
But as McGraw noted in his interview, some viewers have bristled at Burke's socially awkward demeanor, even in the immediate wake of his sister's death.
By that point, Max, the leader of the resistance, had arrived and when Faith tried to lead the conversation, he bristled, as hotheaded as ever.
Its community bristled at the announcement that an algorithmic feed would start highlighting the most popular posts instead of showing a purely reverse chronological stream.
Miss: Non-musical sequences From "Greased Lightning" to "Hand Jive" to "You're the One That I Want," the show's big musical numbers bristled with energy.
READ: Five takeaways from the debate Clinton bristled when asked about her use of a private email server during her time as secretary of state.
But at a news conference, Pelosi bristled at comments made by a few Republicans and conservative activists who blamed heated Democratic rhetoric for the incident.
While it brimmed with the usual kudos for hard work, it also bristled with caveats about the mistakes that he sees some young people making.
Mr. Walton denied being the source of the leak, but bristled at being asked to take a lie-detector test and refused to do so.
Some law enforcement officials have bristled at Mr. Obama's readiness to condemn racial bias in policing after fatal confrontations between officers and African-American men.
Mr. de Blasio, for his part, endorsed his commissioner's focus on quality-of-life crime, even as the reform advocates who helped elect him bristled.
Prominent establishment conservative have bristled at Maréchal-Le Pen's inclusion, arguing that her identification with the party and her family history sends the wrong message.
Are they the product of collaboration, including with Mr. Starnone, as literary critics have speculated in the past, even as Ms. Ferrante's fans have bristled?
U.S. technology companies have privately bristled at those efforts, three industry lobbyists said, in part because expectations that 702 reforms will pass Congress are low.
Unlike previous Italian governments that bristled at, but ultimately complied with, demands from the European Union, Italy's populists have made their careers running against Brussels.
" The big picture: Bloomberg reports that Tesla CEO Elon Musk has "bristled for years at some Tesla customers' complaints that they're paying high insurance rates.
No matter how much we trainees bristled at the wait and the antediluvian regulations our patients had to tolerate, we felt powerless to question them.
Asked about the highway attack, he bristled at the news media's labeling of the group as a gang and suggested the riders had been provoked.
The lawyers for the Crutcher family visibly bristled, perhaps with a sense of helplessness, or with nagging regret that they could have perhaps done more.
The CEO has had a contentious history with the media and bristled at the amount of attention trained on Tesla from both reporters and investors.
Though Democrats stress they want to secure the border, they've bristled at allowing a concrete structure or including more funding without a broader immigration deal.
One has to imagine that she would have bristled that it has had to bow to the whims and laws of Brussels in recent decades.
Arpaio, who is 85 years old, bristled at the notion that his age might count against him if he were to run for office again.
Hardline conservatives have bristled at adopting at any new LGBTQ rights, which they contend amounts to state-sanctioned endorsement of gender fluidity and nontraditional sexuality.
Cashman has bristled at the notion that the pitching staff cost the Yankees a trip to the World Series, insisting it was the offense instead.
Joe Biden had bristled at mentions of Bloomberg, saying that his money could not erase a record that the former mayor did not talk about.
An edgy Thiem won only one of the first eight points as Nadal, cheered to the rafters when he walked on court, bristled with intent.
Eastwood's onboard for the new flick, along with Charlize Theron ... but Michelle bristled at LAX Wednesday .... Scott's a cool dude, but Paul was simply irreplaceable.
He bristled at the suggestion that more N.F.L. players were retiring because they were worried that extending their careers could increase their risks of brain damage.
Even before Donald Trump became president, America bristled at the theft of its intellectual property, aggressive government support for Chinese industry, and the destabilising currency manipulation.
Before Game 2 of the World Series in Houston on Wednesday, M.L.B. Commissioner Rob Manfred bristled at the notion that anything about the ball was different.
Kelly, 68, had some success in restoring order to Trump's White House after he was appointed in July 2017, but the president bristled at his style.
Dimitrov, who was also romantically linked to Serena Williams before dating Sharapova, bristled at the notion that his star-studded personal life could prove a distraction.
The Republican president had bristled at the investigation since taking office in January 2017, belittling Sessions and calling the probe a witch hunt and a hoax.
But I bristled at the Disney-fication of this teenage girl, who shouldn't need a transformative makeover — much less six of them — to attract our attention.
" While Brooks bristled at the thought of book burning, he said at the time, "This is our book, and we're allowed to take out a chapter.
More seriously, some members bristled at my description of the club's membership as "virtually all-white," feeling it implied that the club was racist or exclusionary.
Between the lines: Pompeo bristled at what he called the "ludicrous" and "insulting" suggestion that Trump had not secured specific commitments from North Korea on denuclearization.
He bristled at Barr's description of the close relationship, complaining to aides he didn't realize how much their work overlapped or that they were so close.
She was willfully positive (happiness is "the choice I make every day") but also bristled, in a relatable way, at how women have been forever discounted.
For a long time, Ms. Bilbao, who has two young daughters, bristled at being identified as a woman —- as different — in a field dominated by men.
It appeared as if Batts wanted to set himself apart from the heavy-handed tactics in Ferguson, where anti-riot police officers bristled with military hardware.
Bush received a citation that made no mention of her work promoting literacy and other social causes, she bristled at the focus on her family role.
In April, scientists bristled when Jim Bridenstine, a former Republican congressman from Oklahoma who is not a scientist, took over the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Walmart bristled, and as the election came and went, the two sides continued to negotiate, leading Walmart to receive more favorable terms from the Justice Department.
Senate Republicans bristled after an outside group tied to Mr. Trump went after one of their own for opposing the bill, Senator Dean Heller of Nevada.
The crowd bristled that people still seemed to associate Ukraine with tsarist pogroms, pointing out that its voters had recently elected a Jewish comedian as president.
Rose, who has been an admirer of Ichiro's, bristled at that suggestion, saying the Japanese stats could not be counted equally with a major league total.
That's likely an underappreciated part to any hopes of boosting U.S. grain exports to China, which has long bristled at American genetically modified crops, he added.
In 2019, older works bristled with fresh energy, Joaquin Phoenix reminded us how an actor's body can speak louder than words and tap came flying back.
After jauntily and correctly naming the French foreign minister as "mon ami" Jean-Marc Ayrault, he bristled over naming Park Geun-hye, the South Korean leader.
He was bright and ambitious and, by the time he was in his twenties, bristled at the restrictions imposed on citizens by the country's decaying gerontocracy.
" O'Rourke bristled at the term and suggested Buttigieg was beholden to polls and consultants, prompting the mayor to shoot back that "the problem isn't the polls.
GOP senators have bristled over attempts by Trump and other White House officials to micromanage the Senate's floor schedule and weigh in on the chamber's rules.
These decisions have been welcomed by some Sunni Arab governments, which bristled at the Obama administration's skepticism of their tactics, motives and records on human rights.
The judge also bristled at the kitchen sink approach the oil companies are using to try to get the case dismissed before it goes to trial.
Orrin Hatch, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, bristled at Trump's pledge to provide coverage for everyone, saying that it amounted to an overly ambitious promise.
He has also bristled at the U.S partnership with anti-ISIS fighters affiliated with a Kurdish militant group that he sees as a threat to Turkish sovereignty.
Certainly running a bristled brush along limbs will slough off some dead skin cells — and even help the actives in products applied after brushing to better absorb.
It's true that Roby said she didn't support Trump in 2016, but some of her supporters have bristled at the idea that she therefore supported Hillary Clinton.
But the leading Republican candidates in the 2018 races are more Trump-like conservative firebrands — so much so that they've bristled some sitting Republicans in the state.
Utility-based tokens like Filecoin — arguably the most complex blockchain projects that have found success so far — seem simple in comparison, but Iles bristled at the comparison.
I admit that sometimes I bristled at his messages trying to help me make Gizmodo better with a comment or a suggestion, but Dicko was usually right.
He barely knew his father, who died when he was nine, and he bristled when asked about those who accuse him of coasting on his famous name.
The CSU has long bristled at Merkel's open-door policies that allowed into Germany about 1.1 million refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere since mid-2015.
But the former Communist states of eastern Europe have bristled at EU immigration policy which they regard as too lax toward immigrants and overbearing toward member states.
MORE (R-Ariz.) has bristled at some of Trump's nominees for Pentagon posts, including newly confirmed Deputy Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, who had worked at Boeing.
Trump has long bristled at the term "vacation" and is expected to hold a handful of official events and trips while settled in New Jersey's horse country.
Navy admirals, in particular, pushed back on the potential that they could lose their air arm, and they bristled at the notion of losing a cabinet position.
Trump appeared sensitive to rejections from Ayers and other candidates and bristled at the emerging narrative that he was struggling to attract top talent for the job.
I reached out to In-N-Out's corporate office for comment on this story, and unsurprisingly, they bristled at the idea of comparing themselves to another brand.
U.C.L.A. (21-12) bristled at having to play in the First Four for the first time in its history — the Bruins have been to 18 Final Fours.
Mr. Brown has managed to hold on to his clout longer than most; still, he bristled at the admittedly conventional suggestion that his power was now ebbing.
The Justice Department bristled at Trump's remarks, which referred to current efforts by China and the United States to negotiate a deal to resolve their trade war.
Ms. McCray bristled at other critics' accusation that she, and her husband, have sometimes focused on forgotten corners of the city to the exclusion of everyone else.
They bristled at his announcement that tickets for a raffle to recoup money spent by his predecessor on a presidential jet would go on sale on Monday.
The administration's decision to slap levies on European products could also further escalate tensions with the European Union, which has bristled at President Trump's confrontational trade approach.
But he missed the heady mash-up of the food on which he was raised and bristled at the ignorance in which his ancient culture was held.
Coming from the world of academia, where any experimental result has to be repeated under varying circumstances to be proven legitimate, Dr. Narayanan bristled at this practice.
But Tom Price, the health and human services secretary, bristled when asked on the NBC program "Meet the Press" about Mr. Trump's string of anti-media remarks.
A spokesperson for the company says it cannot confirm or deny leaks but bristled at the suggestion it would seek to help or hinder any political candidate.
Republicans and industry groups have long bristled under the Obama administration's push for energy efficiency, arguing they interfered with consumers' ability to choose what products to buy.
He bristled at attempts to bar military recruiting on campus, minimized the Iran-contra affair and dismissed a shantytown built on campus to protest South African apartheid.
Officials have bristled, however, at criticism from the U.S. that it seeks to profit from the repatriations by demanding excessive fees for handling and transporting the remains.
He has lost the support of Mr. Trump's family, and other senior aides have long bristled at his demeanor or suspected he was trying to undermine them.
But rank-and-file officers have bristled at his messages, and his perceived slights of the police have become a major theme of the Republican National Convention.
At a campaign stop on Monday night, Mr. Christie bristled at a voter's question about why he was campaigning with storm recovery efforts still underway in New Jersey.
Duterte has bristled at criticism from abroad of his war on drugs, in which more than 2,400 people have been killed since he became president two months ago.
Its model of a low, stripped-down airfare and fees for nearly everything else, which many travelers bristled at years ago, is now more common on big carriers.
But Putin, standing alongside her, bristled at the suggestion Russia had meddled in the U.S. presidential election and that it was planning more of the same in Europe.
Published Wednesday night, the interview again showed Bannon publicly asserting his influence in the White House and with the president, something Trump had bristled at in the past.
They bristled at the very thought that there could be any doubt whatsoever that the respected Republican lawmaker and war hero from Arizona was eligible under the Constitution.
In the Squawk Box interview, Perry bristled at the notion that rejecting the mainstream scientific consensus on climate change would put someone on the wrong side of history.
Executives said it would lead to branch closures and job losses; some registered investment advisers, especially small ones, bristled at the thought of being forced to change custodians.
The White House hopes that restoring ties with Cuba will benefit U.S. relations with other countries in Latin America, which have long bristled at Washington's freeze with Havana.
But when asked again about the latest things Trump has said about military leaders and the other issues if he is reconsidering his support now, the speaker bristled.
Mr Aoun, an ally of Hizbullah, bristled at the suggestion that Lebanon's government, which is dominated by the group and its allies, is "a partner in terrorist attacks".
Yes, but: While major automakers had backed efforts to weaken Obama-era rules they call too aggressive, they have also bristled at Trump's push to freeze them outright.
DiorDior was the fourth ranked makeup brand on the list and it's no surprise — in 2002, DiorShow mascara revolutionized the beauty world with its thick, densely bristled wand.
Charlie Dent, a leader of the Tuesday Group, bristled at the latest turn of events on Wednesday, dismissing it as nothing more than "an exercise in blame shifting."
Gonzales, who served under President George W. Bush, bristled at criticism he said was raised by Bharara over controversial mid-term replacements of several U.S. attorneys under Bush.
But what startled me is that the plant thrived under the harsh light—it perhaps grew far fewer flowers, but its stalk was firm and bristled with thorns.
Over the years that followed, Carter seemed threatened by his fellow charming Southerner of humble origins, while Clinton bristled when he was compared to the one-term president.
Mr. Pruitt bristled when the officials — four career E.P.A. employees and one Trump administration political appointee — confronted him, said the people, who were not authorized to speak publicly.
I shared Betty's confused look since I'm confused as to why Jughead would be interested in becoming a South Side Serpent since he always bristled at FP's criminality.
RELATED: House Republicans pass bill to replace and repeal Obamacare "While some embraced my efforts as co-chairman, others have bristled," MacArthur told his colleagues during his announcement.
James bristled at the early mornings and strict rules of his Catholic all-boys school, while Louis and Riley struggled under the weight of QACI's intense academic regime.
Environmental groups and former Obama officials bristled at the choice of Pruitt, and some lawmakers, including U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, said they would fight his nomination.
But moderates have bristled at the idea of passing deep cuts that would have little chance of passing the Senate, where it would attract no support from Democrats.
On a conference call Monday, Boeheim bristled when a reporter asked him how hard it was to run "a clean team" and be successful at the same time.
McDonald's franchisees, who view themselves as a "McFamily" that celebrates people who worked their way up over decades in the business, bristled against Kempczinski's aggressive plans for modernization.
Mr. Romney emerged several hours later to heap compliments on the president-elect, who has bristled privately that Mr. Romney never apologized for insulting him during the race.
At a news conference on Wednesday night, the Vatican spokesman bristled at the notion that the pope's silence on the issue while in Myanmar risked his moral authority.
Some opera buffs have bristled at their title's wink at the Puccini opera, especially after Mr. Adams confessed in an interview that he does not really know it.
Some power producers have bristled at the mandates, even scaling back their operations in certain markets because, they said, it became too difficult to compete without losing money.
Congress has long bristled at what the historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. branded the "imperial presidency" — a reference to Richard M. Nixon's actions during Watergate and the Vietnam War.
When I asked Dr. Filardi whether he could have obtained what he needed for research by simply plucking a feather — a suggestion made by many online — he bristled.
She has often bristled at the fact that both of her sons are expected to answer questions about immigration, but are sometimes ignored on education or health care.
Later that summer, Abu Hafs wrote a twelve-page dissent, but bin Laden bristled at his defiance, and the objections of other Al Qaeda leaders, and moved forward.
In both cases, Mr. McCarthy writes, Mr. Comey bristled at the idea that the reputation of the bureau as an independent and apolitical law enforcement entity was compromised.
And he bristled when asked about a report in Politico that said Mr. Bolton, at a private lunch earlier in the day, had criticized his foreign policy instincts.
But when he was asked whether school children should stay home that week, since nearly two-thirds of the city's classrooms were not air-conditioned, the billionaire bristled.
The secretary bristled at Kelly's questions about Ukraine and, according to Kelly, later shouted at her and challenged her to find Ukraine on a map, which she did.
United pilots bristled at the latest expansion plan, fearing the company could outsource additional service to regional airlines, whose pilots and crew are paid less than they are.
Mexican officials — and, broadly, the Mexican people — have bristled at the announcement, with many worrying that it would somehow open the door to American military incursions into Mexico.
But there was so much to tell them and not enough time, and some of them, self-conscious about filling in behind a seasoned unit, bristled at instruction.
A year ago at Shinnecock Hills on Long Island, Koepka bristled at being omitted from Golf Channel's list of notable players — and won the Open by a stroke.
Trump bristled, saying how insane it was to be asked such a question when the media cooed that Hillary took Tuesday night off to see an Adele concert.
" Lately he'd begun to feel like fans weren't taking him seriously enough; during our conversation, he bristled when I described some of the lines on his album as "hilarious.
They have worried about his ambivalence toward NATO, resented his personal attacks and bristled at his use of trade policy and economic sanctions to restrict their companies and markets.
The Mayo Clinic advises washing your baby's hair once a day with mild baby shampoo and loosening the scales with a small soft-bristled brush before rinsing the shampoo.
"Women are living in abhorrent crisis every single day," bristled Vanessa Contreras, one of the leaders of Colectiva Feminista who have been actively protesting and demanding action by Rossello.
Bloomberg himself has bristled at his ranking, once telling a reporter, "Look, the numbers in these things are always suspect," after seeing how Forbes calculated his wealth in 2013.
Putin did not react to Macron's comments about the Russian media, but he bristled when a journalist suggested that Moscow's hand was behind cyber attacks on the Macron campaign.
Privately, HNA executives have bristled at the group's portrayal by domestic and foreign media, arguing the group's cash flow remained healthy and the current liquidity squeeze was only temporary.
When I refused to answer that question and any other unrelated to my citizenship, as I have every right to do, he bristled and pressed her for more details.
When Salgado became leader, some men bristled, but she offered her position to anyone who wanted it, saying that she would be happy to be just a community policewoman.
Shelagh Delaney was still a teenager when she sent her first script off to a London theater in 1958, enclosing a note that fairly bristled with a bold defensiveness.
Clinton said he was not offended when others had asked the same question, but that he bristled when asked about the 1998 scandal on NBC's "Today" earlier this week.
Putin did not react to Macron's comments about the Russian media, though he bristled when a journalist suggested that Moscow's hand was behind cyber attacks on the Macron campaign.
In Los Angeles that day, people bristled, perhaps, because they hadn't ever expected to experience one that topped Inez Andrews's tearing into it, with the Caravans in the 1958.
One widespread myth is that prying reporters kept trying to figure out where his twisted ideas came from, and Harris bristled at the implication that he harbored psychopathic tendencies.
Books of The Times Mary Gabriel knows that the subjects of her new book would have probably bristled at its title and, consequently, the very foundation of her approach.
But Italy's populist government, which has bristled against Europe's austerity measures, went ahead and submitted a budget with a proposed deficit equal to 2.4 percent of gross domestic product.
At first, Batulo bristled when customers asked for things she'd never heard of and glared at her when she didn't grasp what they said at the speed of light.
Turkey has bristled at the US military's alliance with Syrian Kurds to fight ISIS, fearing the Syrian group will one day help Turkish Kurds make a push for independence.
And during the interview last month, as he strode back to his office, Mr. Sanders bristled when asked about his son, who is running for Congress in New Hampshire.
Other top aides bristled at Mr. Priebus's demeanor or suspected that he was undermining them, while an alliance of convenience with Mr. Bannon seemed to fade in recent weeks.
At her weekly news conference Thursday, Pelosi bristled at reporters' questions about whether the committee was conducting an impeachment inquiry, arguing the public wants the House to proceed carefully.
If there is a wet mess, take the mat outside and rinse it off with a garden hose or clean it with a nylon-bristled brush and dishwashing liquid.
Before he offered up the fact hat he hadn't brought up future election meddling in the call, Trump bristled at attempts by reporters to get him to answer the question.
This week, scientists are taking the prehistoric freak show to another level, with a new paper introducing Capinatator praetermissus, the 500-million year old bristled-jawed worm monster pictured above.
And she bristled at the ideological implication: It also meant that she was the one who had to change her behavior and routine, not the students who were harassing her.
Amy Klobuchar bristled at questions about her record as a prosecutor by mentioning that Bloomberg (who had been cited in the question) had not been subjected to the same scrutiny.
Miller's odious legislative accomplishments notwithstanding, many of the same users who'd clamored for Twitter to enforce its rules bristled when the enforcement seemed to benefit the someone they disagreed with.
China, which has bristled at being ostracised over the virus, was considering delaying an annual meeting of its highest legislative body, the National People's Congress, from March 5, sources said.
But when Dell showed Gizmodo the new Dell Canvas 27, a 27-inch touch-enabled display meant for artists and other creative types, the rep bristled at the clone label.
In 2009, then Immigration Minister Jason Kenney bristled at the way the Iraq resisters were being characterized, and labeled them "bogus refugee claimants" who were "clogging up" the immigration system.
Myanmar has bristled at pressure from Western nations over its armed forces' brutal response to August attacks on security posts by Rohingya Muslim militants in the western state of Rakhine.
And yet when — just a few days after that walk hand in hand — I read about possibilities for drugs that might improve cognition for people with Down syndrome, I bristled.
In Puerto Rico, where most of the island's 3.4 million residents faced a 10th day without power and struggled to find clean water and fuel, Cruz bristled at Duke's comment.
It's hard to imagine the "Griffey in '96" campaign without Showalter, or Reggie Jackson's '70s superstardom without the press boxes full of old men who bristled every time he spoke.
At the time the IAEA bristled at being told what to do, saying it does not take information presented to it at face value and sends inspectors "only when needed".
When French electronic music legends Daft Punk put out Random Access Memories in 2013, some of their longtime fans bristled at how heavily live instrumentation featured in their new sound.
Still, he bristled when the worried producers of the British production of "The Most Incredible Thing" reminded him once too often that it was going to be a family ballet.
Executives at the company bristled when they discovered there would be scenes involving crucifixes in Mr. Shyamalan's new thriller for the service, as The Wall Street Journal reported in September.
When he brought the Senate and Parliament together at the Versailles palace and spoke to them about his ambitions for the presidency, many in France bristled at the monarchical overtones.
People close to Mr. Kelly said he also bristled repeatedly at efforts by Mr. Bannon and Stephen Miller, the president's senior adviser, to install people they liked in his department.
The statement was released following an interview between the two in which Pompeo bristled at Kelly for asking him about Ukraine and his failure to publicly defend Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch.
GOP lawmakers have bristled for years, believing President Obama hasn't been firm enough against Putin, or done enough — including providing lethal aid — to help Ukrainian fighters combat Russian-backed separatists.
At her news conference on Thursday, Pelosi bristled at the suggestion that Democrats have been dragging their feet, but she also suggested the talks could soon come to a close.
Her music was a roar of African-diaspora history, passion and potential, with instrumental passages that bristled with noise and meaningful samples and vocals that bridged speech, rap and song.
Some judges have also bristled at a recent Justice Department decision that handed over the power to rule on appeals cases to the director of the office, a political appointee.
If Mr. Simon, as The Times reported in 1988, sometimes bristled at the appellation "pianist's pianist," with its implied, if rarefied, marginalization, he was ultimately sanguine about his professional course.
The Justice Department always bristled at the notion of congressional contempt proceedings and fought for decades to take control of the case through the statutory contempt process created in 1857.
Company executives have bristled at the intense criticism and, last week at a City Council hearing, seemed to float the notion that Amazon could reconsider its commitment to New York.
Some in the party leadership, however, bristled at the pressure to impeach from newly elected liberals like Ms. Tlaib, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.
The region's churches blend Catholicism with elements of Mayan spirituality, such as the use of pine boughs and eggs, into a Mass that the Catholic Church has long bristled at.
Speaking to Meduza, Zakharova bristled at the idea that connections played a part — her answer giving insight into the new Russia, where things only get accomplished because of svyazi, or links.
Similarly, Americans bristled at the inclusion of the English rapper Giggs on More Life, memeing his unorthodox performance style while expressing their annoyance at the very concept of UK hip-hop.
Bridges bristled at his implication that National had been involved in any hacking and called for Robertson to quit — though he still refused to say how he obtained the budget details.
But enough MPs bristled at the idea of ramming this legislation through Parliament in three days, so they voted down what's called a "program motion," which set out Johnson's aggressive timetable.
"Back in the day, people used a scrubbing motion with a harder bristled brush," she said, implying that technique was as good for periodontists' business as it was bad for gums.
People close to Trump say he's long bristled at implications he isn't his own man, that he's beholden to someone else's advice, or that he's not responsible for his own successes.
Democrats and outside groups have bristled at the decision, arguing that it allows a GOP operative, who has previously worked with Kavanaugh, to cherrypick which documents get released to the public.
When NBC's Craig Melvin asked Clinton on Monday morning about his affair in the 1990s with Monica Lewinsky, the president bristled at the suggestion that he still had amends to make.
After "The Chain Saw Dance" was published, some local residents bristled at his unsentimental way of depicting his fellow Vermonters, presented as a hard-luck group with sometimes off-putting habits.
Bobby Lee, chief executive of the Bitcoin company BTCC, which is based in Shanghai, bristled at that — and at the notion that the Chinese companies represent any sort of united front.
The proposal would likely face significant headwinds in Congress, including from Trump's own party, which has embraced free trade agreements and bristled at the administration's tariffs on key US trading partners.
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has bristled at calls to estimate how many U.S. residents have their data swept up by the program, saying it would be difficult to calculate.
On Wednesday, during Mr. Benioff's investor meeting where he sometimes gazed upon his own image projected on an enormous screen above the crowd, he bristled at times over the shareholder reaction.
Some Republicans have also bristled over Trump's tougher stance toward Mexico, stressing the administration needs to balance border security with maintaining the alliance with one of the country's top trading partners.
She bristled at press scrutiny, which became more intense after Joan Didion and her husband, John Gregory Dunne, wrote an unflattering article, "Pretty Nancy," in The Saturday Evening Post in 230.
But McDaniel and his allies have bristled at that assertion, using her past status as a Democrat to argue that she won't be able to convince conservatives to jump on board.
In the case of the Amazon forest, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro bristled at calls by France and other European powers to put out a series of raging fires of the rainforest.
In the course of a nearly two-hour news conference, the mayor bristled at suggestions that the personnel moves might be intended to remedy management shortcomings during his first four years.
Start a craft project In the past, have you've bristled at the "what are your hobbies" question simply because you don't have time to do anything just for its own sake?
She has bristled at the suggestion that she has downplayed her Indian heritage, pointing to her memoir, in which she writes about the influence her mother and grandparents had on her.
Some of the complaints about Mr. Baker emanated from The Journal's Washington bureau, which had bristled at his leadership role, given his past as an outspoken critic of President Barack Obama.
He has bristled at being undercut, as he was over the weekend when Mr. Trump publicly said Mr. Tillerson was "wasting his time" by trying to open talks with North Korea.
Many progressives bristled at Steyer being in the race — he's a former hedge funder, though he turned to activism years ago — but it was Bloomberg who really set off a firestorm.
Mr. Hurford-Jones bristled at the accusation, saying his journalists had documented problems with CCTV in the past and were justified in following up on the question suggested by Russian colleagues.
Klasco actually bristled at the inclusion of HiFiMan on this list of no-name brands, although really it's just a larger, slightly older, and more successful version of the scrappier companies.
The officials said the changes were being made to make the contracts more palatable to local officials who run the jails, who have sometimes bristled at the additional accommodations for immigrants.
"  Trump, who has bristled at the independence of previous intelligence and national security chiefs, reacted to his accuser far differently than did Maguire, likening the case presented against him to "treason.
And so, when an airline representative at New Delhi's Indira Gandhi airport suggested he check in with his face for a flight to Bangalore in September, he bristled  —  and then declined.
As he awaited financial assistance at a Disabled American Veterans table that had set up shop at Providence Baptist Church, James Taunton, 45, bristled at the notion he was a victim.
Some C.I.A. analysts and officials insisted that the dossier be left out of the assessment, while some F.B.I. leaders wanted to include it and bristled at its relegation to the appendix.
And Chinese officials have long bristled at any criticism they were negligent on the law enforcement front and were always quick to point out that fentanyl was a uniquely American problem.
The Spaniard bristled with energy and menace as he went through his repertoire and, after an unusual amount of claycourt losses in the build-up to the tournament, looked razor sharp.
Supporters of Mr. Craig bristled earlier this month when Mr. Demers appeared to again call out both Mr. Craig and Skadden Arps at an American Bar Association conference in New Orleans.
ET, TNT ABOUT THE RAPTORS: Toronto coach Dwane Casey bristled when it was suggested his team was dominated in Game 2107 but the final margin of the contest didn't reflect Cleveland's supremacy.
Trump has bristled at limits on his administration's ability to detain asylum seekers while they fight deportation, and the administration was in the midst of expanding the program when Seeborg blocked it.
Martinez, whose county sheriff deputies work closely with Border Patrol, Park Rangers and local police to maintain public safety in the border county, bristled at any suggestion the area is crime-ridden.
People especially bristled at Kondo's opinions on books, apparently aghast at the idea that they should perhaps at least consider not lugging around a personal library for the rest of their lives.
This June, as the news bristled with headlines about Facebook's cryptocurrency-to-be and the price of bitcoin once again soared, the mood in the San Francisco offices of Coinbase was subdued.
Robin Smith bristled with menace as the wily Ephraim Cabot, who brings home a new wife, Abbie (Mbali Bloom), who soon becomes pregnant by Ephraim's son, Eben (Marcel Meyer), with tragic consequences.
A male friend of hers told her that Ifemelu, the main character of "Americanah," was Chimamanda without her warmth, and she bristled at this, even though she thought it might be true.
But in an interview in October, he bristled at the criticism, saying he got involved in the Trump campaign out of the same patriotic duty that led him to join the military.
While Florida Republicans support making people pay before being able to vote, politicians have bristled at any assertion that they are acting unfairly, or are effectively levying a poll tax on voters.
Mr. Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, emerged several hours later to heap compliments on the president-elect, who has bristled privately that Mr. Romney never apologized for insulting him during the race.
Mr. Moses, whose Instagram account, since deleted, had been a regular chronicle of himself in states of undress, bristled at the notion that Vogue had been behind his exit from social media.
Spieth, the 2015 U.S. Open champion, recently explained away his victory drought as "a matter of perfecting swing adjustments" and bristled at the use of the present tense to describe his slump.
North Korea bristled at that, as the absence of nuclear weapons is part of the reason Libya's former dictator Muammar Qaddafi couldn't stop an uprising that eventually led to his brutal death.
The hacktivist website DC Leaks has released a set of emails that reveal how Hillary Clinton's campaign seemed to backpedal from supporting a soda tax after an executive from Coca-Cola bristled.
She bristled at the question even being asked of her — apparently in this instance preferring her role as daughter rather than political adviser — and said of course she doesn't think it's true.
The Trump transition's "beachhead teams," which essentially took control of federal departments and other agencies without needing Senate approval, bristled with lobbyists, some working inside the same agencies regulating their former industries.
But some Republicans have bristled at the idea, arguing that it won't help stimulate the larger economy because Americans are likely to save the money over concerns about long-term economic stability.
I have no favorites, but I bristled when I read the Houston Chronicle editorial urging Beto O'Rourke to drop out, return to Texas, and run for Senate against Republican John Cornyn instead.
Ms. Cantello, who has worked for the E.P.A. prosecuting cases since 1990, said that during the George W. Bush administration, some career employees had quietly bristled at more industry-friendly environmental regulations.
A court filing from the National Rifle Association's (NRA) former public relations agency said NRA chief executive Wayne LaPierre "bristled" at the lobbying group's early 2016 endorsement of then-candidate Donald Trump.
According to former National Security Council aide Fiona Hill, Bolton bristled at Trump's reliance on his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani to conduct back-channel talks with Ukrainians in service of Trump's efforts.
Watch: The Times assessed the year in dance, when older works bristled with fresh energy, Joaquin Phoenix reminded us how the body can speak louder than words, and tap came flying back.
Those conflicts have been stoked, the aides said, by mostly lower level staffers, many of them Sanders loyalists from 2016 who have bristled at the 2020 leadership's tone and more exacting standards.
Perez bristled at the notion that some Democratic donors are so frustrated by the DNC's dysfunction over the past few years that they have sworn off giving money to the national party.
PEOPLE: See When Catherine Zeta-Jones Met Michael Douglas for the 'First Time' in Sweet Throwback Photo Turner said that she bristled at the attention from Douglas, 73, Nicholson, 81, and Beatty, 81.
She had a tendency to feel everything very sincerely and loudly for as long as she cared about it, usually several weeks, and bristled at any indication that others' convictions were less pure.
Trump has publicly bristled over his party's repeated failure to get a healthcare bill to his desk and has previously threatened to take unilateral steps to undermine President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement.
He expressed fury to campaign aides over news reports that his advisers were informing political allies of the Indiana governor's selection, and bristled at the idea that he was locked into the choice.
In the lead up to Tuesday's summit, Pyongyang has bristled at comparisons raised by some in the Trump White House of a model of denuclearization that would follow the precedent set by Libya.
Wheels When an engineer suggested installing a supercharger into one of Walter Owen Bentley's cars to give it more power for the 2718 Hours of Le Mans road race, the British industrialist bristled.
She also survived efforts to curtail her influence by Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior adviser, who for months privately bristled over Ms. Conway's getting credit for the campaign victory.
Conservative figures in the government, including Islamic preachers or mullahs serving in Parliament, have bristled over the shelters for years and see them as foreign meddling and an imperialist imposition on Afghan culture.
When Stephanopoulos tried to get the billionaire candidate to reveal his tax rate, Trump bristled, saying it was "none of your business," adding that will be available when he releases the tax returns.
Many presidents have bristled at calls for their staff to testify before Congress, including the George W. Bush administration unsuccessfully attempting to block former White House counsel Harriet Miers from testifying in 2008.
But, he argued, Trump's support will be crucial if any bill has a chance of getting through the GOP-controlled House and Senate, where lawmakers have bristled over some of the president's remarks.
This record of scandals, which no daughter should have to accommodate, was undoubtedly on her mind when she bristled as an interviewer recently asked her about accusations of sexual misconduct against her father.
And after Mr. Cuomo announced plans in October to eliminate tollbooths at the transportation authority's bridges and tunnels, some board members bristled at being asked to quickly approve the proposal with few details.
While some deficit hawks praised the caps for keeping budgets in check, many lawmakers from both parties have bristled against the caps, arguing more funds are needed for both defense and domestic programs.
But officers said their work had become more political than ever, and they bristled at what they considered stereotypes of indiscriminate enforcers who want to sweep grandmothers off the street or separate families.
Republicans have bristled at banks' attempts to freeze out gunmakers for those reasons, and cite their begrudging support of the massive 2007 bailout spurred by risky financial practices at the most influential firms.
Senator John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Senate Republican, who is formally tasked with assessing support within his caucus, bristled at any suggestion that he was putting his thumb on the scale.
In the US, enough lawmakers bristled at Trump's musings that the House of Representatives passed a bill in June that would limit a U.S. president's ability to unilaterally withdraw troops from the peninsula.
First I sort of bristled, considering how the term "hysteria" targets my gender, and how aware we are becoming of so many women's unsung contributions to math and computer programming, among other subjects.
" Mr. Trump has bristled about questions about his faith — last week he called it "disgraceful" that Pope Francis had suggested that his call to build a wall along the Mexican border was "not Christian.
A source close to the ZOA bristled at the suggestion that Bannon was influencing its approach and said it would not tone down the campaign against McMaster, despite entreaties by Bannon to do so.
" A military official who refused to give his name and rank bristled when asked about the Rohingya statements, saying Tuesday that he "couldn&apost accept the term Rohingya, which does not exist in Myanmar.
While Democrats and environmentalists bristled at Pruitt's nomination from the start, conservatives and the energy industry have welcomed his efforts to place more power over drilling and mining regulations in the hands of states.
Kim's representatives bristled at the requests, claiming Trump had promised to make progress on the first two points of the declaration — which laid out ways to improve US-North Korea ties — before anything else.
Having the direct support of the president and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo could buttress her image, however, among global diplomats at the United Nations, who have bristled at Trump's "America First" foreign policy.
Roy has bristled in recent days at critiques of the bill that describe its consequences as a matter of life and death, though there is certainly evidence that insurance coverage, including Medicaid, impacts mortality.
" The president-elect bristled at a question about conclusions by U.S. intelligence agencies that Russia's interference in the 2016 presidential election was meant to favor Trump: "If Putin likes Donald Trump, guess what folks?
She bristled at Sanders' efforts to cast her as a creature of Wall Street: "It's time to end the very artful smear that you and your campaign have been carrying out," she told him.
But she bristled at the idea that her own plans — which mostly spare the bottom 95 percent of taxpayers — don't go far enough in areas like infrastructure to create jobs and boost economic growth.
I had to grapple with them doing my work at a feminist website, and in my own personal life, and I bristled at having to handle fictional versions of them in my down time.
The president has bristled at the criticism, saying that the federal government needs more support from local officials and that there are unique challenges in distributing aid across a disaster zone on an island.
Ivanka Trump's friends say she has "noticeably bristled" when posed questions she views as a first lady's responsibilities and has expressed that she's in the White House to tackle policy issues, the Times reported.
He's bristled at times at the Republican establishment in his state — such as when the GOP-controlled legislature cut the treasurer's advertising budget amid concerns about his official spending ahead of his Senate race.
While Martin admires Tolkien, he also bristled at the conservative vision of Lord of the Rings, particularly the view of war as a clearcut battle between good and evil as well as the monarchism.
It has also contributed to the termination of ambitious undertakings like Project Ara, Google's attempt to build a modular smartphone, as well as the departures of executives who bristled under the new cost controls.
Yet Mr. Morales bristled at such a comparison, noting that much of the frenzied activity around Art Basel was organized by those who parachute into town without any connection to Miami's homegrown art milieu.
But John Demers, the assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's National Security Division, bristled at the notion that the motivation behind the charges might have anything to do with leverage in trade talks.
Over a pint at The Harp, a Belfast bar where some employees socialize after work, three colleagues bristled at the idea that the threats to Bombardier said anything much about Mr. Trump or Brexit.
Other presidents have become estranged from the Justice Department over time, notably President Bill Clinton, who bristled at Attorney General Janet Reno's decisions to authorize investigations into him and his administration, among other things.
She has bristled publicly at being asked about impeachment instead of legislation, repeatedly inviting reporters to question her about Democrats' "For the People" agenda, the catchphrase that they used during the 2018 midterm elections.
Members of the local board of supervisors bristled upon discovering that all but one of their approved vendors planned to use staffing firms, rather than hire employees directly, singling out Bluecrew as an example.
Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the top Democrat on the Oversight Committee, has bristled at Gowdy's refusal to subpoena the Trump administration for documents and testimony, even when the White House has flouted bipartisan demands.
Mr. Trump bristled at what he viewed as Mr. Bolton's militant approach, to the point that he made barbed jokes in meetings about his adviser's desire to get the United States into more wars.
It has bristled at calls by Western countries to comply with the award by the Permanent Court of Arbitration, which it called a "law-abusing tribunal", a "farce" and a "puppet" of external forces.
Mexican business groups have bristled against that plan as an attempt to make the country less attractive to investment, and President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday Mexico would not accept such conditions.
Mr. Flanagan's Republican colleagues have bristled at many of the smaller fees and taxes in the governor's spending plan, but acknowledged on Thursday that the millionaire's tax was inextricably linked to the budget deal.
While he conceived and created some of the most prescient, influential and galvanic music of the second half of the 20th century, Tony Conrad would have bristled if you had called him a composer.
Rose, who flipped the Republican district last year and was one of the last Democrats to announce support for the inquiry, bristled when asked afterward how his position could affect his chances of reelection.
Neri said surrogates, especially those from the Northeast, bristled at the idea of devoting so much travel time to come to Nevada when they could easily be in New Hampshire, Iowa or South Carolina.
We got Trump's former National Security Adviser Friday morning at Reagan National Airport in D.C. ... and he bristled at our photog who asked if the end game of the Democrats is to impeach the Prez.
We got Tank Sunday at LAX, and he bristled at the criticism over the track "Boss Life," which features Offset, saying the word is sometimes used in the rap game for people who aren't cool.
When NBC's Peter Alexander asked Ivanka Trump whether she believes the more than a dozen women who have accused Donald Trump of sexual harassment and assault, she bristled at the idea of the question itself.
Politico reported last month that Trump's private team "bristled" at the Secret Service's desire to take the lead in protecting Trump and in some cases, they had gotten in the way of the agency's protocols.
Perdue also bristled at the idea that Romney is giving voice to feelings that other GOP lawmakers share but are afraid to acknowledge because they don't want to get smacked down by Trump on Twitter.
Giuliani told the Times that he agreed with most -- but not all -- of Trump's positions, and said in the interview that he bristled at Trump's tweet that included an unflattering picture of Cruz's wife, Heidi.
Some players have bristled at what they feel is preferential treatment for draw card Sharapova, who reigned as the highest earning female athlete in the world for 11 years in a row, according to Forbes.
Yet even in the movement's corporate-friendly current iteration, it still bristled at a man being heralded as heroic simply for being married to a woman who, some argued, barely "counted" as curvy at all.
Though Jasmine Shepard conceded that consolidating the high schools would ultimately be a good thing, she bristled at the perception that Cleveland was an out-of-touch backwater stuck in the era of Jim Crow.
The United States recently sent military ships and planes near some of those islands, to make the point that it would insist on freedom of navigation in the area, and Beijing bristled at the gesture.
House Democrats, as well as Senate progressives, have bristled at including changes to the diversity visa program or family-based immigration, saying those two issues should be left to a larger deal on "comprehensive" immigration.
He bristled at that suggestion, saying, "I don't pray at the altar of any public poll," though a few hours later he touted Iowa public polls that favored Democrats, to the delight of the crowd.
Her allies bristled that she faced a double standard due to her gender, noting that Sanders - who spent months essentially waving off questions about his own lack of a detailed healthcare plan - escaped such scrutiny.
Trending posts on Chinese social media platform Sina Weibo called for the Communist Party to address the crisis as citizens bristled under measures like the government-ordered quarantine of 35 million people across 12 cities.
On Monday, for example, Trump took questions during an event that was meant to tout his new trade agreement with Canada and Mexico, but he bristled when reporters tried to ask about non-trade topics.
Russian officials have bristled at such allegations, and former U.S. ambassadors who have worked with Kislyak told VICE News that the characterization of him as a spy doesn't sync up with what they know of him.
The government acknowledges that their messaging could have been better, which is perhaps why they have hired a prominent US-based PR firm to help them, but they have bristled at outrage from outside the country.
A senior FEMA official, he said, told him during an early meeting that "food is not a priority for us right now," and bristled at the idea that anyone was able to offer what he could.
But Justice Department officials have bristled at recent events that threaten to taint the investigation being led by John Durham, a respected Connecticut federal prosecutor who established a temporary office in Washington to conduct the probe.
She told BuzzFeed News that initially she bristled at the announcement of additional transaction fees, but when she learned that the company plans to provide seller support service packages and additional backend tools, she was sold.
COLOGNE, Germany — As Chancellor Angela Merkel proposed tougher laws regulating asylum seekers in the wake of the New Year's Eve assaults on scores of women in Cologne, the city again bristled with violent tension on Saturday.
The Republican's response to the attack was panned by many in his own party, who bristled as he took credit for "being right" about terrorism and suggested that President Barack Obama was sympathetic to militant groups.
China, which has bristled at some measures to close borders to its travellers, was considering delaying an annual meeting of its top legislative body set to begin on March 5, people familiar with the matter said.
When pressed on whether his jabs at Mr. Buttigieg's mayoral resume were comparable to Hillary Clinton's swipes at then-Senator Obama during the 2008 primary — and if the remarks were an "act of desperation" — he bristled.
Mr. Cuomo said he expected Ms. Vullo to be tough on Wall Street, but she might also repair the agency's relationships with fellow regulators and prosecutors, some of whom bristled at the agency's headline-grabbing actions.
But the comments triggered a political storm in India, which has long bristled at any suggestion of third-party involvement in tackling Kashmir, a Muslim-majority region that it considers an integral part of the country.
The NHL has long bristled at paying for the privilege of competing at the Olympics while, in their view, getting very little in return beyond the prestige and a two-week global platform for their product.
" Exfoliates your skin "Helping to exfoliate and eliminate clogged pores and ingrown hairs, the process of running a firm, natural bristled brush over the skin helps loosen and remove dead skin cells, naturally exfoliating the skin.
Without losing its trademark burnished tone, his voice in the "Rome Narration" late in the opera bristled with the desperate intensity of a man who'd been to hell and back — and lived to tell the tale.
Mr. Akhmetov — whose holding company, DTEK, controlled a significant share of his country's coal, gas and electrical supplies — bristled at reform efforts being undertaken by the new government, which promised a "de-oligarchization" of the economy.
And she has bristled at a line of thought in liberal spheres and on social media that she and other women have advanced in the White House by keeping their heads down in a misogynistic workplace.
Or perhaps she bristled at the work's political message, which presented clemency and tolerance as a ruler's supreme virtues just weeks after Marie Antoinette had been arrested midflight and forcibly returned to Paris amid jeering crowds.
Catholic progressives have advocated a greater use of contemporary idioms consistent with the Second Vatican Council reforms of the 1960s and many bristled under what they considered a heavy and out-of-touch hand from Rome.
Airplane parts are difficult for independent researchers to come by, and the big manufacturers have bristled at any suggestion that their products might have vulnerabilities like anything else that runs on millions of lines of code.
Pruitt bristled at the phrase "climate denier," a description that his critics have often applied to him in light of his repeated statements disputing scientific conclusions about the large role humans play in warming the planet.
We get asked a lot if we'd add an option for a Canada Goose skin, but we've always bristled at this—ours is a game about THIS goose, our specific goose, not a customisable goose-avatar.
And though I bristled when Erik criticized my word choice or claims, and I knew I couldn't sustain that level of friction long-term, I swelled with appreciation for this man as our time together dwindled.
Germany, meanwhile, has bristled at Trump's criticism of NATO and Merkel, at his trade policies, his abrogation of the Iran nuclear deal and Paris climate agreement, and his ambassador to Germany's open support for Merkel's opponents.
Mexican business groups have bristled against the Democrat labor market plan as an attempt to make the country less attractive to investment, and President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday Mexico would not accept it.
Mexican business groups have bristled against the Democratic labor market plan as an attempt to make the country less attractive to investment, and President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Tuesday Mexico would not accept it.
Gorsuch bristled at the notion of government lawyers brushing aside judicial decisions, and further held that the government could not reach back and apply its new restrictive rule to conduct that occurred before that rule became final.
Planning for that military parade, which was to feature thousands of service members in uniform alongside their hardware, drew stiff opposition from local politicians in DC, who bristled at the idea of tanks rolling through the streets.
Honea bristled at a Friday press conference when asked whether many of those listed, more than a week after the disaster, were expected at this point to end up either deceased or declared missing and presumed dead.
At first we bristled at this tendency, but as the film wore on and we became increasingly incapable of processing complex thoughts, we came to depend on it and see it as an act of great generosity.
But city hall, run by the 5-Star Movement, attacked the idea of spinning off the capital's open air museum, bristled at proposed changes to handling revenue, and appealed to the regional administrative court to block it.
League leader Matteo Salvini said he was ready to bin the contested amnesty, but he bristled at 5-Star suggestions someone in his party had surreptitiously broadened it to offer relief to financial criminals, including money launderers.
Turkey's authorities have bristled at the Western reaction to the abortive coup, in which rogue soldiers used fighter jets and tanks to attack parliament and other key buildings, killing more than 240 people, many of them civilians.
Several GOP senators have bristled at the strategy, arguing that Congress should either pass the House bills or a continuing resolution (CR) so that the government could reopen while Trump and Democrats fight over the border wall.
While Fisher had bristled about the idea that he was "a puppet" of Jackson, who has repeatedly said he would be unable to coach the Knicks, Rambis has been eager to highlight the similarities of their philosophies.
Kellyanne Conway has bristled at reporters who have brought up her husband, noting that she is one of the most prominent women in Washington, D.C., and questioning the need to bring up George Conway or her marriage.
But his threat to nix the department's reprogramming ability would likely be dead on arrival in the GOP-controlled Senate and spark backlash from Trump, who has bristled at legislative attempts to rein in his executive authority.
On Saturday, Mr. Simmons said that he loved that show and was thrilled about its success, but he bristled at the idea that its popularity has been surprising given the omnipresence of hip-hop in American life.
Nevertheless, the locals here have bristled under the idea that skiing could be claimed as the history of the country to which they owe their citizenship rather than the ethnic bloodlines to which they owe their heritage.
The cybersecurity industry is filled with conferences, and speaking at them is routine for experts like Mr. Baccio, but the campaign's leadership bristled at his appearances at events like CyberWarCon, which took place outside Washington in November.
Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) had bristled at Buttigieg for months, making a critique that many voters didn't seem to share: that the 37-year-old mayor of Indiana's fourth-largest city was not qualified to be president.
Although NATO has argued that the defense system will be a deterrent against Iran, Russia has always bristled at the possibility of Western missiles along its eastern frontier and considers any eastward NATO expansions as acts of aggression.
He bristled on Monday when asked about contentions by some Republicans that he is a spoiler in the race to beat Trump, whose rhetoric on immigrants, Muslims and women has raised alarm within the Republican establishment and beyond.
When it was suggested that Hardy's agent Drew Rosenhaus set up the interview as a "thinly disguised PR effort" to showcase Hardy as a changed (or innocent) man—and get Hardy a job, somewhere, next year—Schefter bristled.
Brady has been a bit more coy about their friendship: Though he had a "Make America Great Again" hat in his locker last season, he bristled when pushed to answer questions about his support for Trump's racist policies.
But Contreras bristled at the new proposed timeline, and instead ordered the State Department to release the remaining 7,600 or so pages in four smaller installments over the next three weeks: on February 13, 19, 23, and 29.
Lukashenko has bristled at what he sees as Russia's attempt to strongarm his country into merging with its much larger neighbor, and accused Moscow of falling into "hysterics" over his moves to balance ties between East and West.
The group bristled with singular personalities—Hannah Arendt, Mary McCarthy, Dwight Macdonald, Philip Rahv, Irving Howe, Norman Podhoretz—all with clashing views on socialism, violence, modernist literature, and the responsibility of the intellectual within a society in flux.
In addition to your regular bathing routine, take the following steps for proper foot care:At least once a day, use an antibacterial soap like Hibiclens Antiseptic Skin Cleanser and a soft-bristled brush to wash your feet thoroughly.
In one of the few moments of palpable tension, Laurie Prendergast bristled against the idea that this meant that she or anyone else at the table could rightly be called "privileged," though they were currently enjoying a privilege.
DHAKA, Bangladesh — The sale of a used car is developing into an unusual criminal case and a potential diplomatic sore point between the United Nations and Bangladesh, whose government has frequently bristled at criticism from the international community.
On Tuesday, a site linked to Mr. Mélenchon's party bristled with debate, with one poster saying Mr. Macron and Ms. Le Pen represented "the failure of the system" and others agonizing over whether to abstain or vote blank.
While he was treated with a certain reverence by all staffers, who understood the important and unique role he played in Trump's orbit, he also never bristled at the lower-level tasks that were part of his portfolio.
She's known for being, perhaps, more introspective and intimate in both her imagery and content than Dylan, though her work in the '80s and '90s has bristled with more raw anger and exasperation over political conservatism and global polarization.
Though Trump was heralded when he visited Saudi Arabia and Israel on his first foreign trip, European diplomats bristled at Trump's rhetoric about Article 5, the principle of common defense, during a speech on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Though that endeavor has included outreach to liberal grassroots organizations and building connections between groups that once felt excluded by the DNC, Ellison has bristled at some of Perez's decisions, most recently his decision to endorse New York Gov.
In a long interview with The Daily News last week, he repeatedly bristled and dodged when pressed on national security and foreign policy issues, and even on the fine points of some of his core concerns, like banking reform.
That early stumble occurred during a moment of feuding between Mr. de Blasio and Mr. Cuomo, who was said to have privately bristled at someone as close to his orbit as Ms. Hinton taking the job with the mayor.
But Pena Nieto later contradicted Trump, saying he had told the American that Mexico would not foot the bill, and he bristled during his television interview when asked why he had not made that clear at the news conference.
China has long bristled at accusations, mostly from Western nations, that it is solely interested in Africa's raw materials, and that its no-strings-attached approach to loans and aid has only encouraged graft and brought unsustainably high debt.
While Democrats have broadly bristled at a number of these nominees for their conservative leanings, Farr is among a smaller subset that they've specifically called out for positions they say are discriminatory and explicitly targeted at disenfranchising African Americans.
While Mr. Trump has at times acknowledged that Russia sought to intervene, he has often bristled at any suggestion that he did not win his campaign fairly and played down any role Moscow might have had in the outcome.
Speaking to reporters on Friday morning, Mr. Trump bristled at criticism that Mr. Whitaker was not the right choice to run the department, because, as Mr. Schumer said, Mr. Whitaker was not currently serving in a Senate-confirmed position.
Some voters who backed either Ms. Warren or Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota bristled at the idea that they might support them because they are women, even as many acknowledged a greater awareness of the sexism women candidates face.
After the case concluded, Unsworth bristled at the efforts from the defense to belittle his contributions, including one moment where he had been asked by an attorney whether or not he felt like he needed to apologize to Musk.
And he survived the critics in the Special Agent ranks -- including me -- who bristled at his realigning an agency that has stubbornly resisted change whenever it has been suggested or demanded over the course of its 110-year history.
After a brutal GOP primary where Trump and his rivals traded personal attacks, many Republicans bristled when Trump brought his scorched-earth campaign style to the general election fight, rather than following the typical path of mid-summer moderation.
Some PD heavyweights bristled at this and said the party should be open to talks with 5-Star, which managed to whisk away many former center-left voters thanks to its focus on helping the poor and the unemployed.
During the hearing on Thursday, Republicans bristled at Dr. Hill's accusation, and after several tangled rounds of questioning, they used their time to push back on her suggestion that they refused to accept Russia's role in the 2016 election.
FRISCO, Texas (AP) -- Alfred Morris bristled when asked what has changed for him now that Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott is serving a six-game suspension over domestic violence allegations with fading hopes for a third reprieve in court.
The internal documents reviewed by The New York Times indicate that executives for the company, FlyNYON, bristled at the pilots' concerns, insisting that the operation, which offered the chance to snap selfies while leaning out over the city, was safe.
" Republicans also bristled when Eva Paterson, the president and founder of the nonprofit civil rights group Equal Justice Society, suggested that Congress should condemn some of President Donald Trump's more provocative remarks that she believes "emboldens white nationalists and white supremacists.
Mr. Kerry bristled at the suggestion that by agreeing to the cessation of hostilities in the next week he was acceding to Mr. Assad's recent territorial gains, or setting the stage for Mr. Assad to create a rump Syrian state.
While Gab says that it immediately suspended the man's account and has cooperated with authorities, it has bristled at the suggestion that it was responsible for the environment that has made it an attractive home to those in the alt-right.
"A lot of other candidates would have bristled at the dizzying pace of media outreach that we did across different platforms and on different topics, but he was game and trusted that there was a method to the madness," Smith said.
Is there just something about public transport—the strange, stiffly bristled seats, the rigid seating arrangement, the lack of legroom, the tacky gray-flecked floors, the windows that only open a half inch at the top—that makes us this way?
Trump bristled at criticism of his administration's handling of the Puerto Rico disaster as Hurricane Florence approached the coast of North Carolina with heavy rains that forecasters warned would cause catastrophic flooding across a wide swath of the U.S. southeast.
" Kushner 'disposable,' Comey fired because he wouldn't clear Trump In the interview with Hannity, Giuliani also bristled at the idea the special counsel would target Trump's eldest daughter Ivanka Trump and said that as a man, Jared Kushner, is "disposable.
Mr. Biden on Saturday bristled at Ms. Warren's suggestion that he was borrowing Republican talking points about her health care proposal, while at the same time accusing her of peddling plans that have no chance of being enacted as law.
In a twist revealing of today's gender politics, some feminist critics have praised "Elle," while some male viewers at Cannes — and some male distributors who turned it down — have bristled at how the film has audiences laughing between violent rape scenes.
The Democratic responses didn't particularly diverge when it came to policy (although one assumes a Latino audience would have bristled at Beshear going out of his way to assure viewers that Democrats believe "we need to enforce our immigration laws").
Silberstein "had Ms. Warren over to his San Francisco-area home" for fund-raisers in the past, but "bristled when he first heard Ms. Warren would stop doing events like the dinner he had held for her," according to the paper.
Kazmi recognized the responsibility of safeguarding the weapons in the face of a challenging domestic security environment but bristled at any suggestion from an American that Pakistan's military might not be up to the task of protecting its most important assets.
But he has bristled at the restraints imposed on the presidency as few have, lashing out at judges, lawmakers, investigators and journalists who anger him and expressing frustration that he is not supposed to use the F.B.I. as he sees fit.
Justice Stephen Breyer, for his part, bristled at the suggestion from Francisco that the court could eliminate the CFPB's for-cause removal provision without overturning Humphrey's Executor because the 1935 case dealt with multimember commissions rather than single-director-led agencies.
He publicly distanced himself when Mr. Trump blamed "both sides" for violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., and bristled when the president gave a political speech to the Boy Scouts of America, an organization Mr. Tillerson once headed.
Simeone would not be drawn on that at Anfield on Wednesday; Klopp might have some sympathy for his opposite number in that case, as a man who has regularly bristled — occasionally unnecessarily — when asked for his views on the coronavirus crisis.
"There's been less talk about it this year with a Republican-led administration than there has been the last seven or eight years," said Mr. Walker, who bristled at the Senate's plan for tax cuts that would add to the deficit.
The standoff between tech companies and politicians is most acute in Europe, where freedom of expression rights are less comprehensive than in the United States, and where policy makers have often bristled at Silicon Valley's dominance of people's digital lives.
" Just as black Chicagoans bristled at Mr. Trump's assertion that they and other minorities in inner cities were all "living in hell," those in Mount Greenwood hated that the protests in their community reduced them to caricatures of "white supremacists.
She bristled and pushed back on charges that the interrogation program was immoral, insisting that her own "moral compass is strong," and fought to describe what she said were the C.I.A.'s successes in capturing the United States' most-wanted men.
Each "Twitter is not real life" piece seemed to perform extremely well on (uh) Twitter, especially among a kind of centrist political and media elite who bristled at the extreme opinions of far-right and far-left leaning Twitter folk.
When Attorney General Jeff Sessions suggested that he might back away from those agreements, he was playing to police officers who have bristled at calls to root out racist and unconstitutional practices that have been well documented by the Justice Department.
Election officials nationwide bristled last month when Mr. Kobach asked them to assist his hunt for fraud by providing public data on all 200 million registered voters, including partial Social Security numbers, addresses, military statuses, political party registrations and felony records.
The dress had been given a bit of an update, to be sure — less fabric on the sides, the sleeves were gone, there were jewels all over the matching bikini bottoms, and iridescent palm fronds bristled like epaulets on the shoulders.
The Democratic operative wrote an op-ed published in The Washington Post on Friday afternoon where he bristled at Trump's tweet from earlier in the day that claimed Podesta was a major topic of conversation during the summit in Europe.
They bristled at criticism of President Donald Trump's proposal to form a panel to question the scientific consensus on climate change and whether it poses a national security threat -- despite Pentagon and intelligence community assessments that it does just that.
The Soviet state bristled at the success of Vidor's film — Tolstoy's novel, after all, is a national treasure — so it commissioned what it hoped would be a bigger, better adaptation from Mosfilms, one of the country's oldest and most respected studios.
" But Corry bristled when his apology to her in 2015 seemed to mix up her incident with another — "When he phoned her, he said was sorry for shoving her in a bathroom" — and explained that he "used to misread people.
Liberals in the crowd bristled at the slogan—a throwback to old anti-Russia sentiment that is unsavoury in a new Estonia, where the Russian-speaking population still struggles to integrate—and what they saw as the perversion of Estonian national pride.
Biden bristled at a recent question about whether his son's position on the board of a Ukrainian gas company -- at the very time the former vice president served as the point man on Ukraine in the Obama administration -- presented a potential conflict.
But what isn't as well remembered is that there was still significant resistance to Ike from the loser GOP establishment, led by Senator Robert Taft, who bristled at the outsider takeover and also resented being passed over for the presidential nomination himself.
Answering a question from an attendee who mentioned his past remarks, LePage bristled and said he'd been collecting files on every drug dealer arrested in Maine since the controversy, and that his records showed that "90-plus percent" are black or Hispanic.
Twitter's successful stream of an NFL game the week before - to a relatively tiny real-time audience - nonetheless tweaked incumbent network executives, who bristled at a Goldman Sachs media conference about the way the league is slicing-and-dicing broadcast and digital rights.
But the industry bristled in meetings last week at the suggestion that the commission could create a centralized body to govern the agreements between the video providers and the manufacturers of devices that could use their apps, according to a Tuesday filing.
That was an egregious breach, but users have also bristled at its expansive facial recognition features (which gets turned on by default), that time Facebook briefly tested broadcasting online activity statuses for users, and when Facebook tested individual search bars on user profiles.
President Obama at a Thursday news conference bristled as he explained the decision to send the $400 million to Iran, the first installment of a $1.7 billion settlement that the two countries agreed to regarding an abandoned arms deal from the 1970s.
When it was reported in the run-up to the presidential election in 2012 that African-American ministers were encouraging their congregations not to vote because of President Obama's position on gay marriage, Mr. Bernard bristled at being lumped into that group.
Talking to me over video-link from MIT moments after his victory is declared, he bristled slightly when I asked if we were in the "age of the geek," an era when engineers and inventors were finally getting the adulation they deserve.
At first Updike bristled at the subject matter of my thesis — I was writing about fathers and children of divorce in his stories and Richard Ford's novels — warning me not to assume that his fiction was memoir (as he warned many others).
While the Trump administration bristled at the plan, an M.L.B. official noted that in a National Security Presidential Memorandum from June 2017, the government indicated it did not want to affect any existing approvals with Cuba; M.L.B. was granted approval the previous year.
" Representatives of the local hip-hop scene bristled at the notion of an outsider telling their story, from Chief Keef's manager to the Grammy winner Chance the Rapper, who released a blistering fusillade of tweets deeming the film both "sexist" and "racist.
What they're adding: While in previous years state election officials bristled at even well-meaning hackers intruding on their turf, this year Voting Village will launch the "Unhack the Ballot" initiative, pairing state officials with researchers who can offer nuts and bolts advice.
" President Trump bristled at accounts on Saturday that his personal lawyer, Rudolph W. Giuliani, had become a focus of a widening criminal investigation into his dealings in Ukraine, insisting that Mr. Giuliani was a "crime buster" and target of a "witch hunt.
CreditCreditRauff Hakeem, via Storyful MEDAMAHANUWARA, Sri Lanka — Past the end of a remote mountain road, down a rutted dirt track, in a concrete house that lacked running water but bristled with smartphones, 20173 members of an extended family were glued to Facebook.
They bristled at being painted as beholden to Mr. Trump, reacting angrily when the lead House impeachment manager referred to a news report that said Republican senators had been told their heads would be "on a pike" if they voted against him.
In 2015, after some shareholders bristled at Benioff's $39.9 million pay package, the company froze his base cash salary to 2016 levels and reduced some of his fresh stock tranches to trim his overall annual pay in subsequent fiscal years 2016 and 2017.
During a visit to South Korea Wednesday, Pompeo bristled at and called "ludicrous" questions about why a document Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un signed on Tuesday did not include language that Pompeo has called essential to any nuclear deal.
It also follows a rare public spat days earlier between Musk and the NASA chief, who bristled at Musk on Twitter for celebrating an unrelated milestone achieved on SpaceX's deep-space Starship rocket while completion of the Crew Dragon project remained delayed.
In an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes," Trump bristled at the idea of cutting weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, and in comments on Monday, he touted a denial from the Saudi King and offered up the idea that "rogue killers" were involved.
Evangelical groups protested a provision in the proposed constitution that would have legalized same-sex marriage, artists demanded the repeal of a decree they said would give the government more power to censor them, and small private businesses bristled at new regulations.
Some United States airline executives bristled at the presentation and materials, according to four people familiar with the matter, believing that Boeing has lost credibility and that the company's involvement would only hurt their efforts to win back the trust of passengers.
While Trump and others have pressed for a Senate vote on the First Step Act, a cadre of Senate Republicans, including Cotton, have bristled at the legislation and worried that it could offer early releases to those who've committed more violent crimes.
The results were a repudiation of a Republican establishment that has bristled at the prospect of either Cruz or Trump winning the party's nomination and has largely lined up behind U.S. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who was shut out in all four contests.
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel bristled on Sunday at the lifting of international sanctions on Iran and vowed to flag up any violations of its arch-foe's nuclear restrictions while drawing on U.S. defense aid to prepare for a possible military face-off in the future.
At a White House news conference the day after the nuclear accord was signed, Obama bristled at a reporter's suggestion that while basking in the glow of the foreign policy achievement he was all but ignoring the plight of Americans still detained in Iran.
Duterte has bristled repeatedly at criticism over his "war on drugs", which has killed about 2,400 people since he took office two months ago, and on Monday said it would be "rude" for Obama to raise the question of human rights when they met.
Mexico and other Latin American countries have traditionally bristled at the appearance of being bullied by the U.S. American officials have "made our concerns known to Mexican authorities about the dangers posed by this particular individual," State Department spokesman John Kirby said on Monday.
The standard Shout is just fine, but when dealing with chocolate that's been smeared on carpet or upholstery, the gel formula, which comes with a bristled cap that helps to work the stain remover in and lift soiling off fabrics, is a great choice.
Conservatives who bristled at what they considered Mr. Obama's weak approach offered few complaints about the president's taunting escalation, arguing that Mr. Kim was a bully and the best way to stand up to a bully was to match him, rhetorical blow for rhetorical blow.
After an earlier Pompeo visit, Pyongyang accused Washington of making "unilateral and gangster-like" demands on denuclearization and bristled at the idea that it must take significant steps toward dismantling its nuclear program before a peace treaty is signed or international sanctions are lifted.
In 1968, when the Brazilian band Os Mutantes performed the discordant "É Proibido Proibir" ("Prohibiting Is Prohibited"), with the singer Caetano Veloso, for an audience of conservative students at the Festival International de Canção, in Rio, the crowd bristled, and many turned their backs.
He and others bristled at the tight leash Mr. Harper kept on his cabinet, but a government motion giving Quebec a form of nationhood within Canada was too much for Mr. Chong; he resigned rather than vote for the motion, as cabinet rules required.
Lawmakers from both parties have bristled at the expected tariffs — 85033 percent on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminum — expressing concern that the Trump administration is haphazardly barreling toward an international trade war, while neglecting to recognize the potential domestic impact of the tariffs.
Last year, after facing criticism for being in office nearly two years without visiting troops overseas, Trump had hinted for weeks that he would take a trip soon — "I'm going to a war zone," he bristled when asked whether he was afraid to visit.
But sometimes you'll find mismatched woods from different periods, which might require more extensive stripping techniques (like hand-stripping the wood with a wire-bristled toothbrush) and refinishing, a process that Mr. Camenares said could cost upward of $25,000 to $40,000 for an entire house.
My most colorful memories, however, all map back to the afterparties—early sexual experiences with boys and girls, coked-out mornings that bristled with circular conversations, disorienting k-holes that seemed to last for days, impromptu DJs sets seen through a haze of Newport smoke.
Masters such as Romare Bearden, Bob Thompson, and Alma Thomas, and even contemporary abstractionists like Jennie C. Jones, have bristled at the notion that authentic blackness must be equated with realism and that black art must be subject to sociological approval before being evaluated aesthetically.
It's not lost on the Frog designers that other prototypes have failed after physicians bristled at the idea of investing in something new, either financially (the cost of purchasing a new device) or mentally (the time it takes to learn how to use a new device).
The health ministry did not respond to a request for comment on the pharmaceutical association's statement, but Venezuela's socialist government has bristled at criticism of its health system, which former President Hugo Chavez, who died of cancer in 2013, spent lavishly on during an oil bonanza.
Russia bristled at those comments on Wednesday after announcing that Russian SU-34 fighter bombers flying from Iran's Hamadan air base had for a second day struck Islamic State targets in Syria's Deir al-Zor province, destroying two command posts and killing more than 150 militants.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch on Tuesday pledged independence from President Donald Trump, bristled at his criticism of the judiciary and said not even the president is above the law amid Democratic concerns he would be beholden to the man who selected him.
Washington (CNN)When President Donald Trump's top national security advisers briefed Congress last week on intelligence used to justify killing Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, many lawmakers bristled at the defiant attitude of Trump's team — particularly his top general, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley.
Trump had repeatedly praised Putin on the campaign trail, suggesting that the two could work together to thaw increasingly icy relations despite the U.S. intelligence community's assessment that Moscow had sought to disrupt and influence the 28500 presidential election — a conclusion that Trump has long bristled at.
But now that special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation did not establish a criminal conspiracy between Trump's team and the Russian government, according to a summary released Sunday by Attorney General Bill Barr, the Republicans who long bristled at Schiff have dialed their attacks up to 11.
While Democrats have broadly bristled at a number of these nominees for their conservative leanings, Farr is among a smaller subset that has specifically been called out for positions he's taken that Democrats say are discriminatory and explicitly targeted at stripping African Americans of their voting rights.
The exchange was something we all could have guessed from how Ronnie bristled over Sammi's decision to skip Family Vacation, or his fixation on the creepily lifelike "Sammi" doll DJ Paul DelVecchio brought, but it was still shocking to hear the father-to-be speak his emotions out loud.
Schoolgirl A-line day frocks in pure white jacquard and crepe dripped beaded mimosas from a shoulder; little lace dresses were sprinkled with violets and pansies; mink roses blossomed on a cream astrakhan coat; and organza or silk ruffles bristled from the shoulders and wafted gently from the waist.
The mayors of New York, Chicago and Philadelphia, all Democrats, rejected the idea of columns of soldiers and armored vehicles on their streets, a day after U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis left open the possibility of staging the event outside of Washington, which also bristled at the idea.
But Kuwaitis, who are citizens of one of the world's top oil exporting states, bristled at gasoline price hikes earlier this year, and candidates who oppose planned public sector wage restraint and other price hikes won nearly half of the seats in the 50-member National Assembly last month.
The decision for the House intelligence committee to release the ads ends a standoff between Congress and Facebook over making the ads public, after Facebook turned over 3,000 Russian-linked ads to the intelligence committees but bristled at the notion of releasing them, citing the company's privacy policy.
The Chinese government has bristled at Trump's moves in recent days, protesting his decision to accept a telephone call from Taiwan's president and voicing concern after a weekend interview on "Fox News Sunday" in which Trump questioned whether the United States had to stick with a "one China" policy.
" But, even as he bristled and grumbled, Conrad surely recognized that, despite the preoccupation of some admirers with the islands he had glimpsed and the storms he had survived, things were also looking good for the prophecy he had set down twenty years before: "This is my creed.
The 1970s at Casablanca's headquarters in Los Angeles were full of cocaine and extreme behavior, but Mr. Harris bristled at a passage in a 1990 book by Fredric Dannen, "Hit Men: Power Brokers and Fast Money Inside the Music Business," which claimed that the offices closed at 3 p.m.
Even Representative Mark Meadows, Republican of North Carolina and chairman of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus, which has been a disruptive force in the past, was resigned to the disaster aid bill sailing through the House, though he bristled at the bailout of the flood insurance program.
The mayor had told reporters less than 24 hours earlier that his path to the nomination rode mostly on the hope of a contested convention, but bristled when asked whether he would drop out in order to consolidate the moderate vote in a bid to defeat Bernie Sanders.
But more recently, particularly amid Giuliani's work as President Donald Trump's personal attorney, New York federal prosecutor alumni have bristled at his behavior and his comments, particularly his criticism of the office's actions in cases such as the prosecution of Michael Cohen, a former personal attorney to the president.
The president, a political newcomer elected earlier this year, has bristled on other occasions about being entangled in the U.S. impeachment inquiry, which centers on whether Trump abused his office by attempting to pressure Zelensky into publicly confirming the probes by withholding military aid and a White House visit.
Perhaps that's why so many Arabs bristled when a trailer released in January for the hostage drama "Beirut," starring Jon Hamm, seemed to reduce the city to a flashy backdrop for action-movie explosions — a backdrop devoid of Beirut's unique topography that includes mountains and the Mediterranean Sea.
In an interview at the NHPR office in Concord, the state capital, Ms. Chooljian and Mr. Rodolico bristled at descriptions of "Stranglehold" as slanted or even "critical," arguing that the show's irreverent title was meant to establish a tone that would set it apart from other political podcasts.
Speaking at one of his regular morning news conference last week, the president bristled at journalists' questions about femicide, and tried to bring the conversation back to his announcement that the government had recovered more than $100 million in criminal assets and would be channeling it into poor communities.
Such displays of emotion — whether spurred by competitive juices or exuberance — have been rare for the United States players, who have bristled at suggestions that players from the Caribbean or Asia, with their attendant bat flips and celebrations for a fine play, were having more fun in this tournament.
Otting, who had extensive experience in CRA compliance during his career as a banker, including as CEO of OneWest, gave a spirited defense of the measures outlined in the proposal, and bristled at the suggestion that only the simple performance ratio at the overall bank level would matter.
Palace Manager Roy Hodgson, after his side had thrown such a scare into the most in-form team in the world, thus bristled at post-match questions about whether Wilfried Zaha had gone down too easily in the box to win the hosts' penalty in the 92nd minute.
This year, there has also been concern among the president's allies that Mr. Miller, who in previous years has bristled at losing control of the speech-writing process, has been trying to reassert himself as the final voice on a speech that will most likely lean heavily on immigration.
The two men maintained a genial pose for the cameras, though he bristled when Barnier dismissed as "impossible" some of Britain's demands to benefit from the EU single market without accepting EU legal authority and said he thought Britons were "nostalgic" for the open market in Europe they had helped build.
The cuts at the Pulitzer Prize-winning daily paper, known for eye-catching front-page headlines and taking on the city's power players, including real estate developer Donald Trump long before he was elected president, drew criticism from both average readers and politicians who bristled at how the paper covered them.
Though he was convinced that observation and realism were all he needed and that its disciplines would yield art worthy of that asceticism, he still bristled at one mentor's criticism of "The Potato Eaters," indicating he might have been unsure about whether that work validated his new commitment to painting.
Whitmer and Edwards are two of the governors who have bristled under the president's comments about measures like travel bans and lockdowns in addition to pushing Trump for expanded resources like under the Defense Production Act, which would employ private companies to manufacture needed medical supplies, including masks and ventilators.
They have bristled at some of President Donald Trump's words and pushed back at some of the year-old administration's policy stances, but as American CEOs gather in Davos, Switzerland, this week at the World Economic Forum, one thing is clear: They are happier than they were this time last year.
"Your macho shit can't phase me now," Hannah snarls on the song, and while such sentiment may have indeed repelled much of the band's SoCal pop punk following, it was like a magnet for those who never felt particularly macho and who bristled at the scene for harboring exactly those elements.
Trump, recounting his 2017 state visit to Beijing during a speech at the National Republican Congressional Committee spring dinner in Washington on Tuesday evening, said Xi initially bristled at the title, but after Trump pointed out that the barriers to Xi staying in power for life had been removed, the Chinese president relented.
While throughout much of my life I bristled against and complained about my mother's overprotectiveness — her worrying, her curfews, her rules against my crossing the expressway exit into the Circle, her objections to a class trip to Great Adventure because she had visions of me falling off a ride — I am glad now.
"As the 15-year-old living in close quarters with my mom, I felt an obligation to step up and fill a role, fill a position that was vacant at that time, you know, and in doing so, I bristled and I kind of shoved down a lot of emotion," he explained.
Perhaps by now you have seen the clip of Kobe from his visit to the "Jimmy Kimmel Live" show in 2018, telling the world that Gianna bristled any time she heard a fan suggest to her father that he and his wife, Vanessa Bryant, needed to have a boy to uphold Kobe's legacy.
His task now will be to take over a rattled and demoralized National Security Council apparatus that bristled at Mr. Flynn's leadership and remains uncertain about its place in the White House given the foreign policy interests of Stephen K. Bannon, the former Breitbart News chairman who is the president's chief strategist.
But Roksanda Ilincic, the Serbian-born, London-based fashion designer whose understated role in the local fashion scene over the last decade has suddenly changed into marquee status, bristled at the suggestion her appeal was rooted in "power dressing" when pushed on the subject in her airy East London studio last month.
" And feminists bristled at Biden for appearing to shout at Warren as he took a measure of credit for her idea to create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, prompting a tense exchange during which he tried to recover by telling Warren she did a "helluva job," to which Warren coldly replied, "Thank you.
According to testimony presented so far, Mr. Bolton bristled at efforts by Mr. Giuliani to bypass the national security process as he pressured Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and a conspiracy theory that Ukrainians, not Russians, intervened in the 2016 election, and did so to boost Democrats, not Republicans.
He gave me more or less the same answer to two different questions, hammered home his main point—of how happy he is with the new lineup and how great the new album is—and bristled when I characterized him as "conservative," choosing instead to refocus on his core values of faith and loyalty.
She writes: Multiple sources told The Federalist that Needham bristled at DeMint's repeated attempts to assert control over the splinter organization and began plotting to overthrow DeMint once it became clear that the former South Carolina senator had no desire to outsource control of the think tank to the 30-something political operative with no policy background.
At a recent screening of his film Author: The JT Leroy Story, director Jeff Feuerzeig bristled when an audience member suggested that the novels by the transgender, HIV-positive, ex-truck-stop-prostitute Jeremiah "Terminator" LeRoy—the literary persona created by author Laura Albert—wouldn't have been such a big hit had the backstory not been so salacious.
Clinton writes that she bristled at former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenEight Democratic presidential hopefuls to appear in CNN climate town hall Hill Reporter Rafael Bernal: Biden tries to salvage Latino Support Biden, Buttigieg bypassing Democratic delegate meeting: report MORE's suggestion that she failed to adequately convey the Democratic Party's commitment to helping the middle class.
As A-Rod rode the bench these last few weeks — "painful and embarrassing," he said — and Manager Joe Girardi bristled at reporters' questions of why, anyone who knows Cashman could imagine his hardening feelings about a player the Yankees welcomed back in 2015 after a one-season suspension for being snared in the net of the Biogenesis drug scandal.
Apart from the feathered fancies, there were coronas of leaves in fuchsia and jade green that bristled like haute dandelions on the model's heads, capping off a remarkable outing that took the elements of classic high fashion — ruffles, volumes, bows, embroidery, taffeta — and rendered them weightless, and without pomposity: couture for the era of the casual everyday.
In July 2017, President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE bristled when Congress passed sanctions to punish Moscow for meddling in our elections.
Michael R. Bloomberg on Friday brushed back critiques about his wealth and bristled at the suggestion that he was using it to buy success in the 153 presidential race, arguing that other Democrats who have complained about his entry into their party's primary could have taken it upon themselves to earn their own personal fortunes, as he had done.
During the first two years of the Trump administration, when Democrats were in the minority, they bristled when officials like Mr. Sessions refused to answer their questions about communications with the president on the grounds that Mr. Trump might, in the future, want to invoke executive privilege over them — even though Mr. Trump never actually did so.
Sitting onstage between two Planned Parenthood officials and gripping a handful of filled-out notecards, Mr. Biden, a Roman Catholic who has long wrestled with how to balance his faith with his support for abortion rights, bristled for a moment when he was asked about what one of the moderators called his "mixed record" on abortion rights.
Just the fact that Trump shook Kim's hand in Singapore gave the dictator legitimacy on the international stage, but when he was challenged on why the U.S. got so little out of the summit, Trump bristled, pointing out that Kim had agreed to repatriate the remains of U.S. soldiers killed during the Korean war, as well as its commitment to denuclearization.
Clinton, who doggedly remained in the 2008 primary contest against Barack Obama until June despite his insurmountable delegate lead and Democratic calls for her to bow out, has said she will not call on Mr. Sanders to withdraw, but she has bristled at the implication that he could overcome her big leads in both pledged delegates and the popular vote. Mrs.
We got Farrah out Thursday at LAX and she bristled at Bristol's verbal attack this week, when she blasted MTV ... "All they want with my little segment each week is some fake fill-in Farrah Abraham/Jerry Springer BS." Bristol griped that the program fails to showcase her work ethic -- a single mother who juggles parenting 3 kids all by her lonesome.
The Belen Hotel, as they call their home, a 703 boardinghouse for railroad workers that Woodman renovated himself, bristled with rugs and objects and artworks, but Chicago's office was spartan, with tall, rigorously arranged bookshelves, framed awards and certificates, and photographs of friends, including one of her mentor Anaïs Nin, whose best-selling diaries, first published in 270, were an inspiration.
Senators emerged from Thursday's hearing bitterly split into those tribes, with Democrats persuaded by Dr. Blasey's calm and unflustered account of being shoved onto a bed, pawed, nearly stripped and prevented from screaming for help, while Republicans were moved by Judge Kavanaugh, who bristled with red-faced outrage and grievance at what he called an orchestrated campaign to destroy his life.
Democrats bristled at the proposal, arguing that despite complaints about the minority party slow-walking nominees by often maximizing allowable debate time for them, both Trump and the Republican majority leader of the Senate, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, have boasted about the record number of district court and appeals court judges that have been confirmed during Trump's first two years in office. Sen.
But while the deal was completed this week, it was forged over the past four months, during which the players took active control of their side of the negotiations with a team of U.S. Soccer negotiators — including Gulati — who had long been eager to do what they called an equitable deal but had bristled at the way the union went about it.
A new report in CNN found that a number of top GOP donors — namely those who lead major hedge funds — haven't been as generous with the official Republican House and Senate campaign arms this year, and it all comes down to some testiness over the tax bill: Collectively, they have bristled at what they view as favored treatment for corporations under the law.
Reporters bristled at their treatment during Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE's campaign event Friday, where the GOP presidential nominee only briefly addressed his past skepticism of President Obama's birthplace and abruptly left without taking any questions.
John Kasich bristled at the notion that Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzTrump moves forward with F-16 sale to Taiwan opposed by China The Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape O'Rourke says he will not 'in any scenario' run for Senate MORE has been outperforming him in winning the allegiances of delegates at state conventions ahead of a likely contested convention.
Bernie Sanders (I-VT) was the first 2020 Democratic presidential candidate to go on Fox News in mid-April, when he bristled with the hosts, censured the outlet's politics, called President Donald Trump a "pathological liar," and seemingly got the Fox News audience to agree with him on a single-payer health care system and even do some call-and-response on Democratic Socialist values.
Those cases were put into the "long-term box," one Ukrainian lawmaker, Volodymyr Ariev, told The New York Times, so as to avoid upsetting President Trump, who has bristled publicly and privately at special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerMueller report fades from political conversation Trump calls for probe of Obama book deal Democrats express private disappointment with Mueller testimony MORE's investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
Chairman Jason ChaffetzJason ChaffetzHouse Oversight panel demands DeVos turn over personal email records The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by JUUL Labs - Trump attack on progressive Dems draws sharp rebuke GOP senators decline to criticize Acosta after new Epstein charges MORE (R-Utah) bristled at the prospect the EPA moved slowly to tell state officials about the water problems, and said the agency should have announced its findings publicly.
Friends say she has noticeably bristled when asked questions that she saw as traditionally in line with a first lady's responsibilities — among friends, she has dismissed queries about whether she would be involved in White House preservation efforts, and has made it clear that she was in the White House to work on meaty policy issues, a move some allies say was out of deference to Melania Trump.
" Ryzik notes that the actress and the director are now dating (saying Aronofsky "bristled at the suggestion that the screen dynamic might be perceived as mirroring that of auteur and megastar in real life"), but her piece also describes what Bardem sees as the key to the chemistry between the duo on set: "She can telegraph pain on screen without needing hurt in real life; he can depict psychosis and remain steady himself.
"Hallquist herself bristled against the 'first trans' framing, mostly because it obscured the actual stakes of what she ran on: a living wage and economic justice in a state where more than 1 in 10 people still live in poverty, collective bargaining and an energized labor movement, criminal justice reform that addresses the system's staggering racial disparities in a nearly all-white state, a focus on climate change and renewable energy," Walker wrote.
Trump has long bristled at the notion that he received help in defeating his Democratic opponent, Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE, and has resisted calls from members of both political parties to do more to disrupt the Kremlin's plans to meddle in future U.S. elections.

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