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"hackles" Definitions
  1. the hairs on the back of the neck of a dog, cat, etc. that rise when the animal is afraid or angryTopics Animalsc2

281 Sentences With "hackles"

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

Since December 29th hackles in the northern Adriatic have risen.
It raised the hackles of Democrats and some Republican lawmakers.
My question had clearly, and understandably, gotten her hackles up.
Unlike wind turbines on land, it raises few NIMBYist hackles.
"Jane Austen: The Secret Radical" sets out to raise hackles.
Crivella&aposs connection to the Universal church has raised hackles before.
FEW words raise as many hackles in America as "bail-out".
Of course, it's that word, ''fake,'' that makes people's hackles rise.
Yet the power that Facebook has amassed has raised hackles globally.
If the past is a predictor, that one will raise hackles.
My hackles raised, I argued inwardly with the author on every page.
Clinton has raised hackles by refusing to go along with this ritual.
The White House's cherry-picking is also raising hackles among some economists.
Now 44, he still projects a nonchalance that can raise official hackles.
Both moves are likely to raise the hackles of big EU states.
But his party's interference with the constitutional tribunal has raised hackles in Brussels.
Trump's refusal to release his tax returns is also raising hackles in districts. Rep.
Simply saying that will raise people's partisan hackles, but it's not a partisan comment.
But Ayers's potential appointment has raised hackles with top members of the president's staff.
Few things raise the hackles of 'Murica more than where we go to eliminate.
But when he visited campus there were no protests, no raised hackles, she said.
That raised the hackles not only of Democrats, but of the foreign policy establishment.
Elsey lifted her tail, high and stiff, raised her hackles and dropped her head.
" As you might expect, the hackles of Ghostbusters purists were certainly raised at "ghost aliens.
Yet the pair has also raised plenty of hackles in their pursuit of visual gags.
Goldman Sachs' latest strategy pivot is already raising hackles with one of its largest clients.
It's that final point about Musk's use of Twitter that has raised the SEC's hackles.
They have calmed nerves, and raised hackles, with their words — and sometimes their dance moves.
For better or for worse, this is the sort of thing that gets journalists' hackles up.
The plan has raised hackles in Britain, where it threatens both job losses and tax revenues.
Her departure may raise the hackles of both Republican and Democratic senators, who supported her vigorously.
At least, unlike Mr Chen, Ms Tsai seems determined to try not to raise mainland hackles.
Scrolling through the number of deadly incidents within the region does tend to raise one's hackles.
You'll forgive me, then, for having entered motherhood with my hackles raised and defenses in place.
The vote also raised hackles in neighboring Turkey and Iran, which have their own Kurdish minorities.
Her shaming of those who choose to travel by airplane — #flightshame — raises hackles among some people.
But in either case, it's usually the mind-set, not the work itself, that raises hackles.
Jamala's victory raised hackles in Moscow, which complained that the competition had been hijacked by politics.
That is partly because nobody has heard of it, so, unlike LSD, it does not raise hackles.
As president-elect, he raised hackles in Beijing after receiving a call from Taiwan's president on Dec.
Uber has raised the hackles of regulators over their predatory practices and those aforementioned artificially low subsidies.
He is Yasser Salameh (Kamel El Basha), and he and Tony have already raised each other's hackles.
Some of the planned proposals for eurozone reform will also raise hackles among ruling conservatives in Berlin.
Director Bernard Blistène has already raised some hackles by stressing the contribution of Chinese émigrés to France.
Even those who haven't directly experienced anorexia will feel their hackles raise at these well-intentioned misfires.
Sites that have raised the ESA's hackles include BitTorrent indexes like The Pirate Bay, linking websites like p30download.
Still, some in Canada were bothered by the original conditions, and the new terms could raise hackles further.
The other dads were still nearby, and so, with my usual hackles raised, I didn't let myself cry.
Glenda would have passed the human test and shown the same hackles-up, fighting stance behavior with dogs.
Trump's sometimes blunt criticism of NATO's practice of underfunding its military forces has raised hackles in European capitals.
He raised hackles recently when he tweeted that Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand "would do anything" for campaign donations.
Any sign of a preference for France would likely raise hackles in Britain, the continent's other major arms exporter.
The security agencies under Mr Sirisena were especially delinquent, but the aloofness of the prime minister raised hackles, too.
Several of Murphy's shows have been critically divisive (and, on occasion, panned in ways that have raised his hackles).
But the tabloid usually raised hackles not because the stories it published were false, but because of its methods.
In January, Mr. Malkovich raised hackles after he described "Bitter Wheat" as a "black farce" on BBC Radio 4.
But the demo — which amounted to a series of extremely high-tech crank calls — raised a lot of hackles.
While Kyrgios' on-court behaviour often raised hackles, few handle pressure moments as well as he did on Thursday.
Its Italianate name notwithstanding, hackles were raised at one of Italian fashion's great houses going, as it seemed, American.
But as a lifelong Superman fan — the target audience, in theory — I find myself with low expectations and raised hackles.
If that is the intention, however, it has probably overplayed its hand, raising Korean hackles with its blatantly coercive methods.
The offer of money and a job in exchange for signing a non-disclosure agreement, however, raised Manigault Newman's hackles.
It made my hackles rise: the sense of how easily lives can get dislocated into a permanent sense of despair.
Some anglers were furious; others took to eBay with their spare hackles, selling them for ten times the buying price.
A visit this week by U.S. First Lady Melania Trump to a pre-kindergarten class in Oklahoma raised hackles in Turkey.
"The way they talk raises the hackles of immigrants of all stripes," says Ed Emmett, a Republican former Harris County judge.
So it's no surprise the Mayhem biopic Lords of Chaos from director Jonas Åkerlund raised hackles even before it started shooting.
Such issues raise even greater hackles than old-style tariff-reduction talks; they inevitably encroach on areas covered by domestic law.
This raised the hackles of Democratic lawmakers who said the move was a conflict of interest because of his refinery stake.
Azar's admission raised hackles among Democrats, who fiercely oppose the idea, which would limit the amount of money going to Medicaid.
The NFL's new policy for team accounts sharing GIFs and video has raised the hackles of the whole damn sports internet.
" Among the works that raised Greenberg's hackles was the recently finished "Cache-Cache" (21958), which the public renamed "Hide-and-Seek.
It's clear that Nielsen wouldn't have been nominated for the DHS job if she still raised hackles within the White House.
He ruled out any discussion on the procedure to launch a vote now and immediately raised hackles north of the English border.
His plans are therefore likely to raise left-leaning voters' hackles and could drive others who feel marginalised into less reformist arms.
Given time, spikes of steel and glass push upwards from its back as if the raised hackles of an animal under threat.
The ambassador acknowledged that Trump had raised hackles in the UK. "There's no question that maybe some feathers were ruffled," he said.
Though the idea of putting a power plant in a wilderness area raised some hackles, the location was in many ways ideal.
And its claims have raised the hackles of researchers at competing companies who believe the Silicon Valley giant is inflating its accomplishment.
But the weakness may raise hackles in Washington and Bern -- currency markets will be on red alert for any comments from Trump.
Ivanka's trip to the Olympic closing ceremonies in South Korea raised the hackles of the likes of chief of staff John Kelly.
Those and other issues have slowed Facebook's growth and damaged its reputation, raising the hackles of lawmakers and regulators around the world.
They are echoed in the jagged graphite lines, like tiny hackles, of the sharp-toothed dogs that stand guard in the foreground.
What's more — and this is what got my hackles up — those unconcerned consumers rated ethical shoppers boring, odd, less fashionable, and less sexy.
Of course, this raises hackles in frontline states Greece and Italy, which feel swamped with refugees out of Africa and the Middle East.
But Christie also has a fluency in blunt vernacular that can be formidably effective with GOP voters even as it raises liberal hackles.
When she spoke at Harvard in 2015, she said, "the hackles went up"; she crossed her arms sternly by way of grim illustration.
She acknowledges that the one she found anyway has caused raised eyebrows, and in some cases hackles, because he is so much older.
One of its biggest was a $460m deal to make the Russian judicial system more efficient—something almost designed to raise hackles in America.
But on the House side, where Democrats are trying to sort through ideological rifts within the party, EMILY's List's engagement has raised some hackles.
As he's beefed up law enforcement tools, Sessions has extended the "law and order" administration to the courtroom, raising hackles from criminal justice advocates.
The drinks had names like "Blood on the Leaves" and "(I'm Not Your) Negroni," and they definitely raised some hackles down there in Mississippi.
Speaking of which: Online ads became so intrusive in 2018 that they increasingly ruined people's web-browsing experiences and raised more hackles about privacy.
But a new proposal to phase out felines to preserve native wildlife susceptible to predators has raised the hackles of some cat-loving residents.
In July, hackles were raised again when the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline invested $300 million in 653andMe and gained exclusive rights to its customers' data.
" There are many reasons Monsanto raises hackles, Dr. Tyson acknowledges, but "to be concerned about the safety of their G.M.O.s is to be misinformed.
That brief appearance was enough to raise the hackles of researchers at competing companies who believe the Silicon Valley giant is inflating its accomplishment.
"I felt her voice was so extraordinarily pure, I just couldn't worry that we were going to raise hackles," he said of Ms. Blume.
If we are holding firm that "people suck" (another one that raises my hackles), we will certainly find evidence to back up that claim.
Most recently, hackles were raised in Paris by reports that the online booking service Airbnb paid less than €100,000 tax in France last year.
Yet the contrast between her gilded detention in Vancouver compared with the fate of the imprisoned Canadians in China has raised hackles in Canada.
But they weren't engaging in reconnaissance or anything else that should have raised Iranian hackles beyond just the basic protection of their territorial waters.
Still, the gap between Chinese rhetoric about "community and shared destiny" and projects full of Chinese workers paid for by host-government debt raises hackles.
Perhaps not surprisingly, these exemptions have raised the hackles of organizations such as the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA), the leading trade group representing ethanol producers.
In places this darkly brooding score juxtaposes strands of 12-tone writing with crushingly poignant tonality, which raised hackles among modernist composers at the time.
The criticisms first gained prominence in 2015, when the network awarded Caitlyn Jenner its Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at the ESPYs, raising conservative hackles.
But for progressive, upwardly mobile Asian-Americans — many of whom have aligned their identities with a more modern political consciousness — Yang's approach has raised hackles.
While that might raise your hackles, it also raises interesting questions about digital privacy, especially in light of the Supreme Court's decision in Carpenter v.
Elizabeth Porter raised some hackles on the statehouse floor this week when she delivered an angry speech denouncing the Parkland survivors behind the #NeverAgain movement.
But the European Commission's bid for greater oversight and to mandate more regional cooperation has raised the hackles of big EU states, wary of it overreaching.
Another point of contention a new program with comedian Michelle Wolf, who famously raised the hackles of conservatives at the White House Correspondents' Dinner in April.
Over the weekend, she raised many lawmakers' hackles after posting a series of tweets arguing that family separation was not, in fact, a Trump administration policy.
Pompeo, whose hawkish foreign policy views and comments about minorities have raised Democratic hackles, would replace Rex Tillerson who was pushed out by Trump last month.
A revised EU law on payments services comes into effect next January to spur competition, but draft rules underpinning it have raised hackles at fintech firms.
The rail project has also raised hackles because of plans to allow mainland police to check the documents of Guangzhou-bound passengers in Hong Kong itself.
That might raise hackles from some privacy advocates, but the ACLU's Cagle says the important thing is that the ban on using facial recognition is maintained.
In "Saving Souls," a teacher (Julia Ryan) summons the mother (Nelly Saviñon) of a little boy whose report on Hitler raised hackles among students and parents.
So prickly is the atmosphere in Birmingham that if a white non-Muslim of any ideological hue were to make that argument, defensive hackles would immediately rise.
The comment has raised hackles amongst nationalists north of the English border, where they have a majority in the devolved parliament and are increasingly discontented over Brexit.
That combination of forces has raised the hackles so high that the US government is looking elsewhere for Chinese companies that might pose a national security risk.
During Tillerson's confirmation hearings, he raised Democrats' hackles by saying he did not know Exxon lobbied against U.S. sanctions on Russia, where he did business for years.
An Israeli ad for Eurovision that used a misogynistic term and an anti-Semitic trope to send up stereotypes about Israel has raised hackles among some viewers.
While one can understand Take-Two wanting to protect the integrity of GTA Online for non-cheating players, the company's heavy-handed tactics continue to raise hackles.
The animal brain, he says, is tricked by VR. When it sees something that it doesn't like, rather than sitting idly by, it gets its hackles raised.
The technology behind the ballot-printing touchscreen machines has also raised hackles among cyber researchers, election security advocates and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.
All my sociological hackles are rising and the little hairs on my arms are standing up, the way they do when I sense a trend coming on.
But at a school where most teachers were raised in the same southeastern corner of Appalachian Ohio as their students, Mr. Sutter's credentials themselves could raise hackles.
Zinke's more than $6900,2628 charge for a charter flight home to Montana and Pruitt's $28503,22019 in private and military flights should rightly raise the hackles of taxpayers.
Mr Barr, who served as attorney-general from 1991 to 73, has raised Democratic hackles by criticising Robert Mueller for hiring prosecutors who have donated to Democratic campaigns.
On June 4th Donald Trump's new ambassador to Berlin raised hackles when he said he wanted to "empower other conservatives throughout Europe"—apparently a reference to V4 governments.
In some cases having multiple passports also allowed firms to win the support of more than one government, or undertake mergers that would have otherwise raised nationalistic hackles.
But Trump's pick has also raised hackles on the right, especially among those who most passionately agree with the president-elect on his signature campaign issue: immigration restriction.
Former Vice President Joe Biden raised hackles on the left over the past week with his own public yearnings for a return to the manners of years past.
" Or Aikin's description of swimming in the river: "The drum fish was drummin', and the catfish had they hackles up, and them cottonmouths was slitherin' with the quickness.
Then comes It. If you weren't already covering your eyes at the horrifying scene, make sure to get your hackles up the second Adrian's body enters the water.
What raised people's hackles was that an Albanian Muslim is one of the book's villains, when it was the Albanian Muslims who suffered disproportionately during the Kosovo war.
Texans have a hard time supplying a definitive explanation for why the state has become so self-obsessed that even sharing a hamburger chain with outsiders raises hackles.
" Elsewhere in the world, Trump raised hackles yesterday after criticizing Jewish Americans who vote for Democrats, saying "it shows either a total lack of knowledge or great disloyalty.
MIKE POMPEO, America's secretary of state, raised Canadian hackles earlier this month when he said during a speech in Finland that Canada's claim to the Northwest Passage was "illegitimate".
The restrictions, which apply to non-EU member Switzerland because it is part of Europe's Schengen open-border system, had raised hackles among shooting enthusiasts ahead of the vote.
The first is that, after an initial honeymoon with Chinese leaders, an increasingly aggressive stand by the new administration raises Chinese hackles while failing to reassure America's Asian friends.
And the prospect of her formally launching a campaign without any more serious discussion and explanation of those past comments raised some eyebrows and hackles among early state Democrats.
"That raised a lot of hackles," John Blaxland, professor of international security and intelligence studies at the Australian National University in Canberra, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Friday.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton got to hand over a big, red (and mistranslated) "reset" button before Putin landed back in the Kremlin and returned to raising American hackles.
That new version of Echo, a $199 speaker with a built-in camera that takes photos to better advise on clothes purchases, raised some privacy hackles with its launch.
Bannon delights, perhaps more than anything else, in raising the hackles of those who would know this about Trump's history and so be galled by his statements about Romney.
Cases where priests from the Moscow Patriarchate refused to hold funeral services for Ukrainian soldiers who died in the Donbass conflict, or blessed pro-Russian fighters, have raised hackles.
That lack of information has raised hackles about the activities of both Facebook and politicians in a country where campaigns are highly regulated and political financing is tightly capped.
That could likely raise the hackles of regulators and lawmakers even more; and depending on your position on corporate power versus governmental power, things could be fabulous, or frightful.
Tillerson, who has done extensive business in Russia, had raised Democrats' hackles at his confirmation hearing by saying he did not know Exxon had lobbied against U.S. sanctions on Russia.
The goosebumps pop up to match the expression on the robot's face, allowing humans to better understand what the robot "means" when it raises its little hackles or gets bumpy.
But it raised hackles on social media, where the hashtag سعوديات_يعلن_مقاطعه_اوبر# (Saudi women announce Uber boycott) gained traction, and women posted pictures showing them deleting Uber apps from their phones.
The former fitter, who has worked at sole Olympic stone suppliers Kays Curling for 216 years, also expects to have his hackles raised by some of the accompanying television commentary.
On his most recent trip to Mexico, Mr. Kushner raised more hackles in the State Department by excluding the American ambassador, Roberta S. Jacobson, from his meeting with the president.
It wasn't taking a drink every now and then that got reformers' hackles up; it was the idea of the rich getting richer by making the poor poorer through addiction.
The suggestion — sure to raise the hackles of employers everywhere — was made by university researchers in England who studied the commuting habits of thousands of people who travel by rail.
The use of outside U.S. lawyers and robust questioning of staff has raised hackles inside the company and led to French media speculation of a backlash against German-born Enders.
While Gab has promised "free speech within the legal limitations of the law," it raised users' hackles by removing a joke from Anglin, under pressure from its domain registrar Asia Registry.
Indie artists' hackles were raised by a self-monetization contract rolled out by SoundCloud that allowed it to change payment terms without notification and blocked artists from ever suing the company.
It doesn't take much imagination to see that a road procession of largely well-heeled leftist city folk telling them to abandon a major regional industry would get their hackles up.
This is why the rapid spread of statewide interest in performance-based funding (PBF) has raised the hackles of public colleges and universities across the country, especially HBCUs and other MSIs.
A Star Is Born has only a moderate interest in the actual music business, however — a fact that will doubtless raise the hackles of some viewers positioned closer to the industry.
"Even the amount of consolidation of power so far may have raised hackles," said Susan Shirk, the chairwoman of the 21st Century China Program at the University of California, San Diego.
The little book's rules have often raised hackles among grammarians, and in recent years its detractors have been increasingly vocal, especially on the 50th anniversary of the book's publication, in 2009.
The plan also raised hackles among some politicians who fear the government will use the Brexit process to reshape EU laws without proper parliamentary scrutiny as they move them into British law.
Even though a few coincidences don't necessarily mean that the video is a complete copy, Twitter's hackles were quickly raised and memes poking fun at Swift, and the similarities started rolling out.
Even the ultimately abandoned House legislation that featured a public option insurance companies didn't like was a very watered-down form of public option to avoid raising hackles from doctors and hospitals.
The proposed directive, which applies to non-EU member Switzerland only because it is part of Europe's Schengen open border system, has raised hackles among the Swiss, who resent intervention from Brussels.
Prime Minister Rajoy's recourse to the courts to block any independence referendum now and in a non-binding 2014 vote on a split from Spain has raised hackles in the industrial region.
But the real hackles were raised at the EU Commission in Brussels, based on damning trade reports published in the latest Business Confidence Survey of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China.
It may also raise the hackles of those who worry that Facebook has accumulated far too much power, a concern that has led to calls to break the company into separate units.
Yes, she opportunistically used this to shame exes, create fodder for talk shows, and garner magazine covers; and even then, it raised some hackles about the way she was using her power.
In recent years, parades have regularly been interrupted by protests against the practice of having blacked-up actors portray Pete, raising hackles among defenders of what they see as a harmless Christmas tradition.
This diplomatic expansionism, however, tends to have much the same effect as the sea-filling kind: raising alarm and hackles, and driving China's neighbours closer to America—and to suppliers of heavy weaponry.
Once on the mountaintop, many South Koreans are moved to display their national flag, chanting hurrahs with arms raised, and singing their national anthem — raising the hackles of North Korean border guards nearby.
Original Lego bricks are here to stay Anyone worried that Lego has sold out to Big Coding can lower their hackles — the majority of Lego's products are still as analog as can be.
Potentially heavy-handed intervention may raise the hackles of Google and other companies in the American tech world, which could claim that, once again, Europe is unfairly targeting companies from the United States.
In recent years companies have been willing to associate themselves with broad messages on social issues, using ads to support female empowerment, the environment and other causes that do not raise many hackles.
The idea has raised the hackles of some conservatives, who believe it could offset the benefit from recently passed GOP tax cuts and put Republicans in a tough spot ahead of midterm elections.
The Carpetbagger has heard arguments backing the decision: "Funny" was the first word of the film's synopsis on Rotten Tomatoes, and hackles might not have been raised had the category been "satire" instead.
Your hackles might be raised even further once you learn that this Purdue study, led by graduate student Chenghao Bi and published in the journal Micromachines, proposes injecting these microTUMs into the human body.
The restrictions, which apply to non-EU member Switzerland because it is part of Europe's Schengen open-border system, have raised hackles among Swiss shooting enthusiasts ahead of a binding referendum on May 19.
The Greens share the CDU's belief in deepening the EU, but also favor the kind of intra-EU transfers of funds and financial solidarity that raise hackles in the fiscally conservative CDU and FDP.
The episode, with its suggestion that Singapore's low murder rate indicated the local police would be unable to solve a homicide or that its courts don't consider evidence closely, raised hackles on social media.
Months after Israel's conservative culture minister raised hackles by trying to adjust Army Radio's playlist, Mr. Lieberman recently assigned a Defense Ministry official to make recommendations on whether the station should continue to operate.
But he raised hackles among intelligence professionals earlier this month when he accused them of leaks that led some U.S. media outlets to report unsubstantiated claims that Russia had collected compromising information about him.
"Your hackles are certainly up about things like the word 'monopoly,' and worrying that general political views could be used against you to artificially constrain your business," Costolo told CNBC's "Squawk Alley " on Tuesday.
But in 2016, the Democrats might have a point in that Trump seems to be going out of his way to choose a number of cabinet members who raise liberal hackles as much as possible.
O'Reilly and Dugard's book raised the hackles of Reagan loyalists with their implication that the 40th President was never the same after surviving a 1981 assassination attempt -- unlike Lincoln, Kennedy and Jesus, past "Killing" subjects.
Trump raised the hackles of a number of American chess players last month when he incorrectly claimed that the United States does not have any grandmasters, the highest level of players in the royal game.
But the "optics" of using Air Force One to ferry Clinton to this event aren't just raising hackles from Trump, they're stoking angry reactions from a lot of voters who believe the fix is in.
They widely condemned Ankara's military push into Syria, while Turkey's purchase of a Russian missile defense system raised hackles with its NATO partners, and could trigger sanctions from Washington - potentially hammering its already fragile economy.
The surprise decision to have the sales team report to Chief Executive Tom Enders and by-pass airplanes boss Fabrice Bregier, first reported by Reuters, raised hackles internally and prompted concerns about a power battle.
Bret: For the record (and because I don't think I've said anything in this conversation yet that will get our readers hackles up) I'm glad Republicans will continue to nominate conservative judges to the courts.
In 2011, the store experienced a surge of attention shortly after celebrities like Selena Gomez and Steven Tyler, for inexplicable reasons, got into weaving grizzly saddle hackles — long, thin, speckled rooster feathers — through their hair.
In the U.S., if family members who don't hold office get too mixed up in governing, hackles are raised, as Bill and Hillary Clinton discovered when he put her in charge of health-care reform.
China's commitment of $1.8 billion to the region by June 2016 is dwarfed by Australia's $7.7 billion contribution, Lowy Institute research shows, but has raised Australia's hackles at the prospect of eroding its long-time influence.
But European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the bloc should also look within its own ranks in its fight against disinformation and he zeroed in on Orban whose populist politics have raised hackles in Brussels.
Onscreen, The Americans' espionage scenes are thrilling, even if they're as simple as Philip bumping into a fellow KGB agent to grab a note, or Elizabeth's hackles raising at the very slightest sound in the distance.
The fact is, Bolton's extreme views, such as his repeated calls for the bombing of Iran, have raised the hackles of even Republican senators like Rand Paul (who threatened to block Bolton if he were nominated).
The executive European Commission wants to simplify "withholding tax" on stocks and bonds bought in one member state by an investor from another, dipping into a sensitive policy area that may raise hackles in finance ministries.
In December 2015, Prince Alwaleed had called Trump a "disgrace" and demanded he withdraw from the election after the property developer's pledge to ban Muslims entry into the United States raised hackles in the Middle East.
The restrictions, which apply to non-EU member Switzerland because it is part of Europe's Schengen open-border system, had raised hackles among shooting enthusiasts ahead of the vote under the Swiss system of direct democracy.
And in 1992, during her husband's first campaign for president — when she raised hackles for sounding more like a running mate with opinions and ambitions than an acquiescent wife — she spoke again at the Wellesley commencement.
His move from the Clinton White House to ABC News — initially as a partisan member of a Sunday political panel, who would also do some reporting — raised hackles inside and outside the network at the time.
That raised hackles at the White House, where some of the staff working for John R. Bolton, the national security adviser and a hawk on North Korea, asked whether Mr. Biegun was giving up too much.
That raised the hackles of the Philippines, which fears that China might try to control the airspace over that land by declaring an "air defense identification zone," as it did in 2013 in the East China Sea.
Google's initial security bug raised hackles in Washington and with the general public because The Wall Street Journal reported at the time that Google didn't disclose it for months because it feared regulatory scrutiny and reputational damage.
Conservatives raised hackles over the issue and that's very easy to understand because here's the big story they buried in all this partisan finger pointing: Facebook is now the undisputed No. 1 news network of all time.
There is simply no evidence that it would be any more effective than the Kyoto or Copenhagen deals, and it unnecessarily raises the hackles of conservatives and moderates who fear a loss of American freedoms and sovereignty.
The proposed change that's raising the most hackles is the plan to eliminate a program that subsidizes loans for low-income students by having the government pay the interest on their loans while they're still in school.
The moderator, Chris Wallace, pushed Mr. Trump on whether he would "accept the result of this election," a question that has raised hackles in recent days as Mr. Trump has floated unsubstantiated allegations of widespread voter fraud.
Already, hackles are being raised about reports that Pelosi was considering a pledge to not raise taxes on the bottom 80 percent—a promise that would make a number of progressive policy proposals virtually impossible to enact.
But there's also an essay by Jennifer Conlin, whose 2015 piece for the New York Times, "Last Stop on the L Train: Detroit" raised hackles and eyebrows all over the city for its myopic view of development.
Cernekee, who has been hitting the right-wing media circuit lately as a sort of James Damore redux, has claimed that starting in 2015, political views he expressed on internal message boards raised hackles within the company.
With the right data, either party (and for that matter any third party) can create fake news designed to influence election results by raising a voter's hackles or making them want to stay home on election day.
But what are really raising hackles in editorial boardrooms are policy changes that would result in the deportation of people who are here illegally and who would not have been subject to deportation under the Obama administration.
The flap came just days after Giuliani raised hackles by telling CNN he could not say that no members of Trump's campaign had colluded with Russia — a statement he was forced to clean up the following day.
Musk tweeted his support earlier this week for Tillerson in the role of secretary of State, a Trump administration choice that has raised hackles among environmentalists as well as skeptics who point to Tillerson's business ties to Russia.
Mr. Sondland raised some hackles at the State Department and in the National Security Council when he asked to be included in the United States delegation that attended Mr. Zelensky's inauguration, according to people familiar with the events.
That may raise the hackles of privacy experts and private companies, given the friction between what private companies wish to protect and what governments wish were exposed — through things like backdoors — but Manfra says close collaboration is critical.
Congress is flexing its muscles on those issues where Trump administration policies have raised hackles in both parties, but the president retains considerable power to set the course of U.S. policy in other important areas of international affairs.
Japan's defense plans raise hackles in China The historic event is the latest example of Japan's assertive defense posture in the region, as China's military continues to flex its muscles, with a 7.6% increase in its 2016 defense budget.
The Whitney Biennial is almost always controversial: When you have an exhibition that claims to present a snapshot of the American art scene, who gets included -- and more importantly, who gets left out -- something is bound to raise hackles.
A few years ago, Mr. McDaniel raised hackles by teaching sex education in his science classes with illustrations that some critics said were too graphic, and one of his daughters led a campaign on Facebook to save his job.
He also raised hackles by warning in a speech against "anyone imposing a particular view or ideology because of their power," a remark that was viewed as stepping outside his area of expertise and into the realm of politics.
But the fact that she's played by one of Hollywood's few vocal Trump supporters has raised eyebrows and hackles, for fear that the new Roseanne might amount to a weekly lecture from Barr on how Trump is great, actually.
"I was trying to hard to keep this prospective and not talk about current events and not in any way raise anybody's hackles that I was trying to use this as a platform to attack anybody," Weintraub told reporters.
As my other half clears the kitchen table, tossing our children's books into a pile on the windowsill and placing a bag over the back of a chair, my hackles rise and I immediately put the books in their rightful place.
Until the story broke, this subculture could go around calling people and events "coincidences" with impunity – pointing to an anti-Trump article by a Jewish author, for example — maybe confusing readers who didn't share their views, but not raising any hackles.
Trump raised Russian hackles this week when the White House said it appeared the Syrian military was preparing to conduct a chemical weapons attack and warned that Assad and his forces would "pay a heavy price" if it did so.
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Just as British ministers were hoping to win EU leaders' support for their newly revealed Brexit plan, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson raised hackles by comparing any attempt to punish Britain to a World War Two escape movie.
Perhaps it's the opinion polls, perhaps it's Apple lobbying behind the scenes, or perhaps the FBI's attempt to push the encryption debate through the courts, rather than Congress, that has really has raised the hackles of the House Judiciary Committee.
Despite his reputation as one of Africa's most outspoken figures, Khama's remarks are certain to raise hackles in Harare, where factions of Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party are locked in a bitter struggle to succeed the only leader Zimbabwe has known.
Democrats mounted unanimous opposition to GOP nominees like Tom Price and Betsy DeVos who deal with core social service functions, while Jeff Sessions and Scott Pruitt secured some votes from Trump country Democrats that raised the hackles of progressive activists nationwide.
While his friendliness toward President Vladimir Putin has raised hackles in his own party, particularly among Senate hawks like Lindsey Graham and John McCain, Trump is on more firm footing with China, since most Republicans are also wary of the country.
Yet Israel's Government Press Office has said most of the visit will be closed to the media, an apparent precaution against faux pas by a president whose two-fisted crime-fighting tactics and rhetoric have raised hackles at home and abroad.
But by reminding Danes of a past purchasing scandal, the ad campaign has raised hackles in some quarters over the use of such tactics but nevertheless has also sparked a public debate about the merits of investing in untried technology.
With growth and inflation picking up pace slowly, the bank is expected to argue it needs to maintain its loose monetary policy stance to keep the recovery on course, even if that raises hackles in Germany over rising in inflation.
If Hillary Clinton had won the election, the speeches probably would have raised hackles from progressives on the left and the usual detractors on the right, while largely being dismissed as the kind of thing that ex-presidents just do.
This would, in turn, raise the hackles of Congressional leaders in the United States, not least Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the House, who are determined to safeguard the 1998 peace agreement that ended three decades of violence in Northern Ireland.
The sudden purchase last week of nearly 10 percent of Daimler, the iconic German car manufacturer, by a much smaller Chinese car company, Geely, has also raised hackles, and questions about where the money, some $9 billion, really comes from.
As Ishaan Tharoor of the Washington Post writes: The reason tweets like Andreesen's (and statements far more provocative than that) raise the hackles of those from the decolonized world is a simple one, but it needs to be spelled out.
Gaudí's work can be seen across Barcelona, but the church project raised hackles as far back as 1883, when the architect was first commissioned — some religious leaders expressed concerns that the Sagrada Familia would overwhelm the city's existing Gothic cathedral.
"You'd have to build that place up quite a bit to make it a viable counterterrorism platform," said a current special operations officer with experience in Syria, adding that expanding al-Tanf might raise the hackles of the Syrian regime.
Every new episode seemed to spawn dozens of articles about privilege, sexism, nepotism, and sometimes even some sexual position that Dunham or a fellow cast member simulated onscreen, raising the hackles of mortified commenters all across this great wide internet.
But Exxon's business ties to Russia have raised the hackles of many politicians in light of President-elect Donald Trump's denial until recently that Russia was behind cyberattacks on U.S. targets during the 2016 election and sought to undermine the U.S. democratic process.
He wasn't a blogger, writer, or activist; rather, he lived a regular life in a provincial city where he was a professor in what I can only describe as a highly uncontroversial subject, and which under normal circumstances would never raise anyone's hackles.
Bilateral relations between Sudan and Israel have never been normalized, and doing so would likely raise hackles in Sudan and the wider Arab world, especially at a time when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is promoting a U.S. peace plan rejected by Palestinians.
Here are some excerpts from an interview I had with Harrell on the occasion of their milestone figures, in which he talks about Kahoot's popularity, its business model, and how to monetize without raising the hackles of regulators trying to protect minors.
Russian state media reported that the USS Porter, a U.S. naval destroyer, entered the Black Sea a few days ago on a routine deployment, a move it said raised hackles in Moscow because it had recently been fitted with a new missile system.
Any journalist on Twitter knows that even mild criticisms of Clinton would almost instantaneously raise the hackles of some Media Matters staffer, giving the distinct impression that the whole project was about protecting Clinton from unflattering press rather than ensuring journalistic integrity.
In a section likely to raise hackles in some national capitals, Brussels also warned that life as a European civil servant was becoming less attractive and that "a further reduction in staff levels could jeopardise the good functioning of the EU institutions".
Only days before, in an editorial board meeting with the New York Daily News, Sanders had raised hackles by confusing the number of Palestinians injured (over 10,000) in the 2014 Gaza war between Israel and Hamas with the number killed (over 2,000).
In a move certain to raise hackles with the European Commission, which monitors and enforces EU fiscal rules, the government sees the deficit remaining at 2.4 percent for the next three years, rather than progressively declining toward zero as the Commission's recipe prescribes.
The next boss will have to grapple with unions that are demanding fresh talks over wages, and the reported choice of a North American to run a company in which the French state has a stake has already raised hackles among some.
Elsewhere Crazy Rich Asians has raised hackles for the nature of its Asian-ness, drawing questions about whether casting a bi-racial actor such as Golding — whose mother is Malaysian but whose father is British — was appropriate for a supposedly Chinese character.
From the ill-advised Nightmare Before Christmas covers album Nightmare Revisited, it is rivaled only in its grimacing lack of subtlety by Korn's version of "Kidnap the Sandy Claws," which is a thing that even typing about causes the hackles on my neck to rise.
North Korea North Korea launched a test fire of a ballistic missile on Sunday, raising the hackles of neighboring nations and the US. The medium long-range missile was never a threat to the US, but North Korea still called the launch a success.
As for Mrs May, she recently (in her old job as home secretary) raised secularist hackles by the emollient terms in which she announced an 18-month enquiry into the operation of Islamic family law in Britain, led by a distinguished Muslim academic, Mona Siddiqui.
Although media organizations represent a mere fraction of the companies affected by the European ruling, according to data provided by Google, the removal of online articles has raised hackles from freedom of expression campaigners, who say the public has a right to all digital information.
Mr. Zarif said on Twitter that "Trump's ignorant hate speech belongs in medieval times — not the 21st Century UN." Mr. Trump's choice of words raised hackles among allies too, as Federica Mogherini, the European Union foreign minister, made clear at a reception on Tuesday evening.
The big picture: Alliances between law enforcement and tech companies, such as Palantir's contracts with local police departments, have a history of raising hackles, and rising concerns in the U.S. over privacy have put some consumers on edge about tech that tracks their moves.
Clause 11 has raised hackles in Scotland and Wales, two of the United Kingdom's four nations, because it specifies that powers currently held in Brussels return to Britain's central government in the first instance, although some of them are currently the remit of Britain's devolved administrations.
On Sunday night, HBO's John Oliver once again raised the hackles of armchair activists, directing their digital ire toward FCC Chairmain Ajit Pai and his giant Reese's mug over the FCC's intention to walk back the short-lived Obama-era Title II regulation of internet service providers.
But it also had to do with its often critical coverage of Mr. Trump and other Republicans, as well as the "Never Trump" stance of the magazine's co-founder William Kristol as he made the rounds on cable television — at times raising hackles at the home office.
Hackles rose; not necessarily at the story's readers, but at the literary culture that makes it so easy to skate by on knowing the three short stories everybody reads in 10th-grade English, and to treat the great short stories that are written every year as afterthoughts.
This week, readers from around the world responded with sadness as well as respect for a terminally ill woman in Oregon who carried out her desire to die with dignity before being ravaged by an inoperable brain tumor, while a new relationship for the Kardashian matriarch raised hackles.
Brady raised some hackles in 2015 by wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat, but the whole of his career has been as anodyne and consumerist as Michael Jordan's; if he ever entertained a thought about anything besides defensive alignments and UGG sales figures, he's kept it to himself.
Still, Mr. Safer sometimes raised hackles, as when he questioned the basic premise of abstract art in a 1993 report, calling much of it "worthless junk" destined for "the trash heap of art history" and saying it was overvalued by the "hype" of critics, art dealers and auction houses.
That English paints Greenberg as a good guy is just one of the reasons why his revisionist look at two 1971 exhibitions — "Contemporary Black Artists in America" at New York's Whitney Museum, and "The DeLuxe Show" in Houston, curated by Bradley and sponsored by the Menils — will raise hackles.
Meanwhile, Orbán has raised the hackles of his European Union colleagues with recent measures, including a "Stop Brussels" government PR campaign which accused the EU of interfering in Hungary's affairs, and new laws putting tough restrictions on foreign universities operating in Hungary, which sparked the latest wave of protests at home.
Republicans know in theory how to get their hackles up over political violence directed at reporters, because in January 2010, when an aide to Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley pushed a conservative reporter (then helped him up, and apologized for his behavior) Republicans tried to end his career in public service.
In a "fictional" essay for a middle-school class, Jenny wrote about being the sexual pawn of two adults in her life, a story that raises her mother's hackles and leads her to leave several pleading messages on Jenny's cell phone begging to discuss what might have happened in her youth.
LONDON — Hours after President Obama landed in London to urge Britons to vote to remain in the European Union, Mayor Boris Johnson, arguably the most visible leader of the campaign for Britain to leave the bloc, hit back with an opinion essay that criticized the president but immediately raised hackles online.
The omission has raised hackles in the Chinese community and caused concern among Malaysians of all faiths, who see it as yet another symptom of the country's growing Islamic conservatism, driven by the government's flirtation with hardline Islamist policies and a cultural shift by religious students returning from the Middle East.
In recent years, Beijing has pursued a raft of laws and regulations, including a new national security law and a draft cyber security law, that have raised the hackles of foreign business groups fearful that China could compel companies to turn over crucial intellectual property to the government in the name of security.
He holds a master's degree in business administration alongside one in art history, and he learned at the knee of Thomas Krens, the former Guggenheim director who franchised that New York museum to Bilbao, Berlin and Las Vegas and raised hackles for mounting shows of Giorgio Armani suits and Harley Davidson motorcycles.
When two public figures as seemingly diametrically opposed as Rihanna and Melania Trump ended up on the same continuum (one that began with them in full pinup mode and ended with both in full cover), my critical hackles went up and the little hairs on the back of my neck started tingling.
So I understand why some queer critiques of Buttigieg focused on his "wonder boy" perfection or his buttoned-up family man affect — like the July New Republic essay by author, critic, and ACT UP activist Dale Peck on his "Mayor Pete Problem," which the site ended up unpublishing after a wave of public outcry condemned it as a "homophobic hit piece" — have raised his supporters' hackles.
Over the years, the company has raised the hackles of many a publisher that has been unhappy with how Google either summarizes stories in Google News, or simply provides enough links around a subject from other sources that a user potentially never needs to visit a publication online to read the original source of the information — thereby depriving the news organisations of traffic and subsequent revenues that come with that traffic from advertising.

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