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34 Sentences With "combatively"

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

It is never long before the President's communications become prickly and personalized, combatively thin-skinned.
Former Representative John Delaney consistently and combatively staked out centrist positions, often overshadowing other moderates.
Washington (CNN)Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh on Thursday combatively responded to questions from Sen.
In response to Klobuchar's questions regarding Kavanaugh's drinking habits, Kavanaugh responds combatively, for which he later apologizes.
The intimidation factor may be why some cast members are so combatively fierce in attacking their solos.
On the other end, John Kasich is interrupting every 10 minutes to croon combatively about his endless positivity.
He spits out "adobo" almost combatively, directing it with senseless annoyance at a Latina woman in the audience.
The film begins with Isou wandering about the Saint-Germain-des-Prés while his disembodied voice combatively asserts his Letterist theory.
Trump decided to bring his stump style to the national debate stage and Hillary Clinton responded more combatively than in the first debate.
They drew feverishly, combatively, each brother keenly aware of whose rib cage looked brawnier, who had rendered more beautiful shadows on his Neanderthal's upper lip.
Mr. Pompeo, however, combatively insisted to the senators that Mr. Trump is "well aware" of the challenges that Russia poses, including its interference in American elections.
On the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' "Black Tongue" from their searing 2003 debut Fever to Tell, front-person Karen O is combatively—but smartly—sneering at her listeners.
Where China's diplomats have long stuck closely to scripted responses couched in protocol, she and some of her colleagues have pushed back against critics, at times combatively.
The work, called "The Prada Double Club Miami," is essentially a live-act temporary dance hall of two opposed spatial designs: one gray and colorless, one combatively hued.
On Sunday, Conway inflamed things when she hit the morning talk show circuit to explain combatively that Spicer was simply relaying "alternative facts" during his briefing -- and not lying.
No presidential contender benefited more from the fury in the base over Kavanaugh's nomination than Harris, who used the hearing to combatively and directly question the future Supreme Court justice.
He would routinely spend several minutes fielding questions from us in the speaker's lobby or elsewhere, sometimes combatively, but he would always end with some version of: 'I appreciate you all.
Mr. Nunes, who has served in Congress since 2003 and grew up in a dairy farming family, is another of Mr. Trump's heartiest backers, often appearing on Fox News combatively defending the president.
NYT reports WH spokesman Sean Spicer's performance before the press yesterday, where he combatively said media reports about inaugural crowds were false and then didn't take question, has earned the ire of the president.
The disclosure last week of the recording prompted a plunge in Brazil's financial markets, an investigation of Mr. Temer and widespread calls for him to resign, but he has combatively refused to step down.
That was when Robert H. Bork, a federal appellate judge named to the Supreme Court by President Ronald Reagan, testified expansively and combatively as he expounded his conservative judicial philosophy at his Senate confirmation hearing.
Watch some more video from VICE Impact: Already in the Trump era, we've seen New York City disagree strongly with Trump and friends on climate and on immigration and take a combatively antagonistic approach to it.
Over email — the only way he'll speak to reporters, after a history, he says, of being misquoted and misunderstood — the community college graduate and Mensa member wields his intellect combatively, like a tenured professor dressing down an unprepared freshman.
In an interview with The New York Times, former White House press secretary Sean Spicer said that he now "absolutely" regrets his press briefing that inaccurately and combatively disputed press reports regarding the crowd size at President Trump's inauguration.
Facebook's old motto Airbnb, the $25 billion room rental startup, pledged late last year to work "collaboratively" rather than combatively with cities — paying its fair share of taxes, releasing mounds of data on its customers — even as sources close to the company previously grumbled to this reporter about personal disagreements with the regulations in place.
" Reading such self-imposed sarcasm made you wonder whether Day sort of agreed with Esquire Magazine's combatively contrarian film critic Dwight Macdonald, when in 1962, at the peak of Day's box-office marketability in such romantic comedies of the era as "Lover Come Back" (19853), "That Touch of Mink" (1962), "The Thrill of It All" (1963) and "Send Me No Flowers" (1964), he wrote Day's popularity off as being a triumph of "the healthy antiseptic Good Looks and the Good Sport personality that the American middle class -- that is, practically everybody -- admires as a matter of duty.
Koppes' motto as Bishop was Pax et Veritas. He acted combatively and boldly, especially against liberalism, socialism and Freemasonry. In the church terminology of the day, he was seen as an ultramontanist. He regularly participated as a guest in the meetings of German bishops in Fulda.
Seiza, the formal kneeling-sitting posture, is not used because it is a "dead" posture which is regarded by the warrior as less combatively efficient. It would be difficult for the swordsman using either of these two latter postures to go quickly into action in an emergency.
For much of the twentieth century, a deep ignorance was displayed towards British women's literature of World War I.Khan, 1. Scholars reasoned that women had not fought combatively, thus, did not play as significant a role as men. Accordingly, only one body of work, Vera Brittain’s autobiographical, Testament of Youth, was added to the canon of Great War literature.Barlow, 26.
The platoon is energised by the arrival of a Tommy Gun, or 'Chicago piano' as an excited Pike prefers to call it. While the men combatively discuss who is to have first turn of it, Godfrey reveals he has a problem. In the office, assisted by Jones, he reveals the truth. More than forty years before, as a 'dandy young buck' he had become involved with a friend, a young woman working as a servant in a nearby Great Hall.
After Thomas Davis's death in 1845 Gavan Duffy offered the post of assistant-editor on The Nation to John Mitchel. Mitchel brought a more militant tone. When the conservative Standard observed that the new Irish railways could be used to transport troops to quickly curb agrarian unrest, Mitchel replied combatively that railway tracks could be turned into pikes and that trains could be easily ambushed. O’Connell publicly distanced himself from The Nation setting Duffy up as editor for the prosecution that followed.
During the 1950s, Playford and the LCL's share of the vote declined continually despite the economic growth, and they clung to power mainly due to the Playmander. Playford became less assured in parliament as Labor became more aggressive, their leading debater Don Dunstan combatively disrupting the previously collaborative style of politics, targeting the injustice of the Playmander in particular. Playford's successful economic policies had fuelled a rapid expansion of the middle class, which wanted more government attention to education, public healthcare, the arts, the environment and heritage protection. However, Playford was an unrelenting utilitarian, and was unmoved by calls to broaden policy focus beyond economic development.
In the opinion of a Krishnamurti biographer, the Society, already in decline for other reasons, "was in disarray" upon the dissolution of the Order. While Theosophical publications and leading members tried to minimise the effect of Krishnamurti's actions and the defunct Order's importance, the "truth... was that the Theosophical Society had been had combatively challenged the central tenet of its beliefs". The failed project led to considerable analysis and retrospective evaluations by the Society and by well-known Theosophists, at that time and since. It also resulted in governance changes in the Theosophical Society Adyar, a reorientation of its Esoteric Section, re-examination of parts of its doctrine, and reticence to outside questions regarding the OSE and the World Teacher Project.
On February 10, 2006, in a meeting of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of which Coleman was a member, during testimony of former Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) director Michael D. Brown, Coleman attacked Brown for poor leadership during Hurricane Katrina disaster relief efforts, saying, "you didn't provide the leadership, even with structural infirmities", "you're not prepared to kind of put a mirror in front of your face and recognize your own inadequacies", and "the record reflects that you didn't get it or you didn't in writing or in some way make commands that would move people to do what has to be done until way after it should have been done."New York Times 2/11/06 (requires login) Brown responded combatively, "well, Senator, that's very easy for you to say sitting behind that dais and not being there in the middle of that disaster, watching that human suffering and watching those people dying and trying to deal with those structural dysfunctionalities".Report Blasts Gov't Failures and 'Fecklessness' Before and After Katrina blackamericaweb.com February 13, 2006 and implored Coleman to stick to questions.

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