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31 Sentences With "chaffing"

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

The Kingdom's radicals may already be chaffing under the new system.
That can lead to chaffing during sex, which in turn can make it easier to contract STIs and other infections.
According to both derms, when sweat lingers in the folds of skin, it can promote chaffing, which leads to redness and discomfort.
In April, Bloomberg reported that McDonald's was chaffing under Uber Eats' high fees and was thinking of turning to other delivery partners.
Additionally, all the straps have self-containing mechanisms, so that there's nothing hanging off and flapping around or chaffing the skin because it's tucked in.
On the other hand, you don't necessarily want a bunch of seams on the sweatiest parts of your body (unless you're a big fan of chaffing for some reason).
UPS and FedEx have invested billions to upgrade and expand facilities in part to handle the boom in ecommerce business over the last decade, leaving investors chaffing over the expense.
Should these options seem too chaste or chaffing, then prospective partners ought to get an STD test (especially since most infections can be cleared up with a simple course of antibiotics).
Here's what we thought: Sally Kaplan, Insider Picks editor: I deal with chaffing pretty badly in the summer, but I really hate wearing Spanx or any sort of spandex shorts under my dresses.
Because, now that it's summertime, who really wants to walk around with skirts that lead to chaffing or too-tight pants that don't allow for any room to breathe in case you drink one too many glasses of rosé.
A group of young political activists chaffing against what they see as undue Beijing interference, won seats in an assembly election last year, and some made gestures of defiance at their swearing-in, which authorities have said ruled them out.
Some experienced slight pain during the actual laser treatment — what felt like the rapid-fire snapping of a rubber band to skin — along with uncomfortable chaffing once the hair grew back in between appointments; The unexpected friction and resulting scabbing and sores was enough to ward them off from finishing the series of sessions.
Rivest's article on chaffing and winnowing Although it bears similarities to both traditional encryption and steganography, it cannot be classified under either category. This technique allows the sender to deny responsibility for encrypting their message. When using chaffing and winnowing, the sender transmits the message unencrypted, in clear text. Although the sender and the receiver share a secret key, they use it only for authentication.
Ron Rivest suggests that laws related to cryptography, including export controls, would not apply to chaffing and winnowing because it does not employ any encryption at all. The author of the paper proposes that the security implications of handing everyone's authentication keys to the government for law-enforcement purposes would be far too risky, since possession of the key would enable someone to masquerade and communicate as another entity, such as an airline controller. Furthermore, Ron Rivest contemplates the possibility of rogue law enforcement officials framing up innocent parties by introducing the chaff into their communications, concluding that drafting a law restricting chaffing and winnowing would be far too difficult.
The Murias are best in craftsmanship. Their skill apply in various objects that from small to big. They turn craft skills into interpretation of basic lifestyles and basic routines of life such as chaffing of paddy, grinding grains, etc. They express their culture and religious faiths into craft art that reflect through gods, goddess, music culture of the community and wildlife.
Chaffing and winnowing is a cryptographic technique to achieve confidentiality without using encryption when sending data over an insecure channel. The name is derived from agriculture: after grain has been harvested and threshed, it remains mixed together with inedible fibrous chaff. The chaff and grain are then separated by winnowing, and the chaff is discarded. The cryptographic technique was conceived by Ron Rivest and published in an on-line article on 18 March 1998.
The vessels go out on short, one-day, voyages and return with fresh fish, which are sold on the fish slabs of Swansea Market and at the Swansea fish docks. Mackerel is a summer and autumn visitor and is eaten fresh. It can be smoked, marinated or made into a pâté. It can be caught around the coast of Gower and, in August, shoals of harvest mackerel can be found chaffing the sea in pursuit of their own fry.
Personally he was of the highest integrity and he despised any > adventitious aid to advancement, such as joining the 'right' social > organisations or currying favour with persons supposed to have influence. He > found it difficult to suffer fools gladly and this, combined with a somewhat > choleric temperament at times, alienated some of his acquaintances. Others > were never quite at their ease in his presence, never knowing whether to > take his quips, uttered in a clipped English accent, as real reproaches or > humorous chaffing.
At the so-called Hankelbrunnen, a fountain in Herrstein, the adult figure represents the Hankel. That the Hankel was often exposed to the chaffing of his surrounding area is symbolized by the boy, who is squirting him with water. The figures were created by the artist Hans-Ulrich Pauly (Veitsrodt) after an idea by mayor Wolfgang Hey, and poured in 1983 by the Glocken- und Kunstgießerei Rincker, a foundry in Sinn that makes bells and artistic objects.Information plaque at the Hankelbrunnen.
Chaffing and winnowing lends itself especially well to use in packet-switched network environments such as the Internet, where each message (whose payload is typically small) is sent in a separate network packet. In another variant of the technique, Charles carefully interleaves packets coming from multiple senders. That eliminates the need for Charles to generate and inject bogus packets in the communication. However, the text of Alice's message cannot be well protected from other parties who are communicating via Charles at the same time.
The simple variant of the chaffing and winnowing technique described above adds many bits of overhead per bit of original message. To make the transmission more efficient, Alice can process her message with an all-or-nothing transform and then send it out in much larger chunks. The chaff packets will have to be modified accordingly. Because the original message can be reconstructed only by knowing all of its chunks, Charles needs to send only enough chaff packets to make finding the correct combination of packets computationally infeasible.
Midwater trawling catches pelagic fish such as anchovies, shrimp, tuna and mackerel, whereas bottom trawling targets both bottom-living fish (groundfish) and semi-pelagic fish such as cod, halibut and rockfish. The gear itself can vary a great deal. Pelagic trawls are typically much larger than bottom trawls, with very large mesh openings in the net, little or no ground gear, and little or no chaffing gear. Additionally, pelagic trawl doors have different shapes than bottom trawl doors, although doors that can be used with both nets do exist.
Horopito has long been used by the indigenous Maori population of New Zealand both internally and externally for many purposes. As far back as 1848, Horopito is documented in the treatment of skin diseases such as ringworm, or for venereal diseases. "The leaves and tender branches of this shrub are bruised and steeped in water, and the lotion used for ringworm; or the bruised leaves are used as a poultice for chaffing of the skin, or to heal wounds, bruises or cuts".Riley, M. (1994) Maori Healing and Herbal: New Zealand Ethnobotanical Sourcebook.
After calling a number of minor witnesses (including the cab driver and the owner of the building Williams and Seymour lived in), the prosecution called Edgar Power. Power testified that Williams had bragged about shooting Walls in response to Powers' chaffing him about being a poor shot. According to Power, Williams responded to the chaff by saying, "Well, that was a good shot anyhow," referring to the shot that had killed Walls. Williams' barrister Hastings later described Power as "[the most] utterly contemptible human being I have ever met,"Hastings (1950) p. 191.
Goats in Marpha Yaks in Mustang Chaffing grain in Kagbeni Loom in Muktinath Pani ghatta in Jomsom Mustang was an important route of crossing the Himalayas between Tibet and Nepal. Many salt caravans travelled through Mustang in the old times. Once a major thoroughfare for the trade of salt and grain between Tibet and Nepal's southern hills, the Mustang District in Nepal's western Himalayas remains a trading route to this day. For centuries, caravans travelled along the Kali Gandaki river trading salt, yak wool, cereals, dried meat spices and more in Tibet, China and India.
The next they are low comedians whose chaffing relationship—and dialogue—could have been lifted from a Batman and Robin episode." Time also criticized the film's score as absurd and anachronistic. Roger Ebert's review of the movie was a mixed 2.5 out of 4 stars. "The movie starts promisingly ... a scene where Butch puts down a rebellion in his gang [is] one of the best things in the movie ... And then we meet Sundance's girlfriend, played by Katharine Ross, and the scenes with the three of them have you thinking you've wandered into a really first-rate film.
For this action, all five sailors involved in the operation were awarded the Medal of Honor on April 16, 1864. Irving's official Medal of Honor citation reads: > Served on board the U.S.S. Lehigh, Charleston Harbor, 16 November 1863, > during the hazardous task of freeing the Lehigh, which had grounded, and was > under heavy enemy fire from Fort Moultrie. Rowing the small boat which was > used in the hazardous task of transferring hawsers from the Lehigh to the > Nahant. Irving twice succeeded in making the trip, while under severe fire > from the enemy, only to find that each had been in vain when the hawsers > were cut by hostile fire and chaffing.
Howat, p. 155 The composer described it as "elegant, but not otherwise important."Norton, p. 25 Fauré intended it to be played more briskly than it has generally come to be performed in its more familiar orchestral guise. The conductor Sir Adrian Boult heard Fauré play the piano version several times and noted that he took it at a tempo no slower than 100 quarter notes per minute.Howat, p. 272 Boult commented that the composer's sprightly tempo emphasised that the Pavane was not a piece of German romanticism, and that the text later added was "clearly a piece of light-hearted chaffing between the dancers".
For this action, all five sailors involved in the operation were awarded the Medal of Honor on April 16, 1864. Leland's official Medal of Honor citation reads: > Serving on board the U.S.S. Lehigh, Charleston Harbor, 16 November 1863, > during the hazardous task of freeing the Lehigh, which had grounded, and was > under heavy enemy fire from Fort Moultrie. Rowing the small boat which was > used in the hazardous task of transferring hawsers from the Lehigh to the > Nahant, Leland twice succeeded in making the trip, only to find that each > had been in vain when the hawsers were cut by enemy fire and chaffing. Leland died on March 18, 1880, at age 45 or 46 and was buried in Lewiston, Maine.
Organised by the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), over 3000 women took part in what became known as the Mud March. In June 1908, she joined 10,000 women in the parade in London, later writing in the Leicester Pioneer, "Brains, character, indispensable service these women give, but they are unrepresented in Parliament; they are voteless, governed and taxed without their consent ... In its place ... floats the Leicester banner of purple and crimson, between those of Leeds and Liverpool. We pass between two living walls of interested, curious, 'chaffing' cheering humanity - 'the superior sex'...It is this thought, this hope, this confidence that we are nearing the goal at last, after so many weary years of struggle and contention , that makes today’s demonstration different from those preceding it". Memorial tablet to Edith Gittins on the wall of the Great Meeting Unitarian Chapel, Leicester.
The Women's Forage Corps (WFC) or Forage Corps (FC) was a British military organisation of World War I. Based at army camps and depots in the United Kingdom and working in gangs of six, its women assisted with matters relating to horse transport such as hay-making, forage, checking bales on arrival at railway stations and supervising their loading, stable work, driving horse carts, chaffing, wire-stretching, making and mending sacks and tarpaulin sheets and . It also included Section Clerks for the related clerical work. The foundations for the Corps were laid in 1915, though it only formally came into being on 1st March 1917 before being further formalised by an Army Order in early November 1918. Led by Mrs Atholl Stewart as Superintendent of Women, who reported to Brigadier-General Hill Godfrey Morgan, it consisted of civilian women (known as Industrial Members) but was under the control of the Army Service Corps.

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