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31 Sentences With "had it in for"

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

He was again alleging the Obama administration had it in for him in a tweet Monday morning.
We have a friend who probably had it in for a similar length and you can't see it now.
Industry executives, and Ms. DeVos, see it as proof that the Obama administration had it in for the sector.
This is not the first time this year that the supposedly innocuous romaine has had it in for us.
Rauschenberg revered de Kooning's genius but plainly had it in for his reputation, as it seems de Kooning wryly understood.
Do you think -- I know you&aposre inspired by Bernie Sanders, do you think the Democratic Party had it in for Bernie Sanders in 25?
But as for the origins of the broader investigation, the inspector general found nothing to corroborate conspiracy theories that the bureau had it in for Trump.
And to cheers, he described how the Times, and particularly one of its columnists — Frank Bruni, though Cruz did not name him — had it in for him.
In a stream-of-consciousness-style defense, the comedian claims Heard had it in for Depp, with whom Stanhope says he and his girlfriend are close friends.
Through sympathetic cops, he was told that a state security official had it in for him and was behind all the attempts to ensnare him as an ISIS recruiter.
Nicki seems to believe Kenneth was falsely convicted ... he was dating the victim at the time and claims the girl's mother had it in for him and made false allegations.
Mr. Calenda added that for two years Mr. Di Maio and his party "had it in for and promised to close" the plant, but congratulated them for changing their minds.
Mr. Boies raised defense allegations that Mr. Spitzer had it in for Mr. Greenberg in pursuing the case against A.I.G., based on an affidavit from Mr. Spitzer's predecessor, Dennis C. Vacco.
Those making that claim, Pascrell said, are disgruntled conservatives who've had it in for the Jesuit Francis for years, and are merely using the recent crisis as a political justification to topple him.
One Justice Department lawyer told Mother Jones that Roberts "had it in for the Voting Rights Act" as far back as the 1980s, noting that he thought it should only address intentional discrimination.
Trump has seemingly had it in for Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos since the presidential campaign, presumably because of how The Washington Post, which Bezos also owns, covered him as a candidate and now as president.
Opinion: Healthy food is trying to kill us Green leaves are off the menu by order of the Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service, and it's not the first time romaine has had it in for us, Rob Crilly writes.
Following the humiliation they received via their media portrayal in the famous Scopes Monkey Trial of 143 (when a Tennessee school teacher was arrested for teaching evolution), many radical Christians believed—similar to today's Trump voters—that intellectual elites had it in for them and retreated from the spotlight.
Still, the interview sparked an uproar from media figures, like Sean HannitySean Patrick HannityGraham: Senate trial 'must expose the whistleblower' Graham says Schiff should be a witness in Trump impeachment trial Lindsey Graham vows to not watch 'un-American' Trump impeachment hearings MORE, and pro-Trump blogs, which quickly attacked Yovanovitch as an "Obama holdover" who had it in for the president.
"As governor, Mitch Daniels looked to censor academic writings and courses", Indystar.com, July 16, 2013.Rothschild, Matthew, "How Mitch Daniels Had It In for Howard Zinn", progressive.org, July 17, 2013.
In 2016, CBC obtained information that the Parole Board of Canada had granted Levin day parole. By March, 2016 he was living in a halfway house. The 76-year-old had requested full pardon. Levin told the Parole Board that the "victims lied and that the police and the courts...had it in for [him]".
Penn is a troublemaker and is generally disliked by all but two of his teachers, especially Mr Marsh (or ‘Soggy’), who has had it in for him for years. Penn has very little faith in himself or those around him. He habitually causes trouble for himself, due largely to his defensiveness and inability to consider the consequences of his actions. He has already had a number of brushes with the law.
"Everybody who said they would stay reneged once word got out."Miller and Shales, 176–79 But according to Michaels, "Jean didn't want them." He believes she especially had it in for the writers, and Franken and Davis and Jim Downey, whom Michaels had wanted to succeed him, in particular. "Everyone got a memo from Jean to clear out their offices by July," he claims, likening her to "the new broom" which, in a common media adage about management changes, "sweeps clean".
The Allmusic site awarded the album 2 stars stating: "Many jazz critics hated commercial Mann LPs like Discotheque and Waterbed with a passion, and saw them as examples of a gifted virtuoso dumbing his music down in order to sell more records. But young soul and funk lovers were digging Mann and didn't understand why jazz snobs had it in for him. ...Waterbed is a vocal-oriented soul/funk project first and foremost. In fact, it's one of the strongest commercial albums he recorded ...worth trying to find if you're a fan of 1970s soul/funk".
Marge later testified against Hutz out of spite for hiring Dr. Nick, a quack doctor with a shady reputation, along with making Bart lie about his injuries and being in intense pain, when he was fine. Hutz' incompetence and greed are also well noted by his rival, the more competent Blue Haired Lawyer. In the episode "Marge in Chains" he describes the following as his "problem" with Judge Snyder: > Well, he's had it in for me ever since I kinda ran over his dog... Well, > replace the word "kinda" with the word "repeatedly" and the word "dog" with > "son". Hutz is a recovering alcoholic.
A difficult boy called Souleymane, weak in written French, submits his story in an interesting series of photographs (at a parents' evening, his mother can speak no French at all). However, after an argument over football teams with Carl, another boy who is problematic, Souleymane insults François and is sent to the head teacher's office. At a teachers' conference to decide final placings, François defends Souleymane but his efforts are undermined by the two student representatives at the meeting, Esmeralda and Louise, who behave in a very childish manner. Afterwards, though sworn to secrecy, the two girls tell the others that François had it in for Souleymane.
On 1993-09-17, the station changed its call sign to KUHD, and on 2007-03-15 to the current KBPO. KBPO had been assigned to local 94.1 FM back in the early 1970s (formerly KLVI-FM). The callsign meant several things; the actual point of BPO standing for Beaumont- Port Arthur-Orange, but also had to joking meanings to those in local broadcasting. One was "Keeps Berry Pissed Off" in reference to local FCC engineer Barry Nadler, who "had it in" for the John Hicks family who owned KLVI AM and FM. Tom Hicks, one of the sons of John Hicks, later was CEO of AM- FM broadcasting and is still owner of the Dallas Stars.
The Motorcycle Boy and Steve take Rusty James home (past Officer Patterson, a street cop who's long had it in for the Motorcycle Boy) and nurse him to health through the night. Steve and the injured Rusty James talk about how the Motorcycle Boy is 21 years old, colorblind, partially deaf, and noticeably aloof — the last trait causing many to believe he is insane. The Motorcycle Boy and Rusty James share the next evening with their alcoholic, welfare-dependent father, who says that the Motorcycle Boy takes after his mother whereas, it is implied, Rusty James takes after him. Things start to go wrong for Rusty James: he's kicked out of school after his frequent fights.
Liverpool bought Keegan as a midfielder, but Shankly soon decided to move Keegan upfront alongside John Toshack. In a reserve match against Tranmere Rovers Keegan, playing right midfield, and after playing a game with an attacking philosophy he was strongly warned by Ronnie Moran that he was "playing too free and easy," and "nearly playing up front." At one stage Keegan took Moran's criticism on board, took the criticism as a slight, and for a period perceived that Moran strongly had it in for him. As a result of young Keegan's lack of positional discipline, Keegan was then tested upfront in a preseason reserve match against Southport. Keegan scored both goals in a 2–1 victory.
Parks worked as an American League umpire until 1982, when Parks resigned (becoming the third replacement umpire to leave the game; Fred Spenn was fired in 1980 and National League umpire Steve Fields was fired in 1981) rather than continue to be subject to the harsh treatment accorded him and the other replacements (referred to as "scabs" by the regular umpires because of crossing the picket lines) and a scathing rebuke of his abilities by New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner after a series in August 1982 against the Toronto Blue Jays when Parks ejected Oscar Gamble and Roy Smalley on consecutive days. Steinbrenner said of Parks: "Judging from his last two days performance, my people tell me he is not a capable umpire. For umpire Parks to throw two of our players out of ballgames in two days on plays he misjudges is ludicrous". Steinbrenner went on to refer to Parks as a "scab" and that he "had it in" for the Yankees since he used that term towards the umpire.
Palais de Justice. During the screening, the court heard that Muhammad had raised his hand to his forehead and moved his leg after Abu Rahma had said he was dead, and that there was no blood on his shirt. Enderlin argued that Abu Rahma had not said the boy was dead, but that he was dying. A report prepared for the court by Jean-Claude Schlinger, a ballistics expert commissioned by Karsenty, said that had the shots come from the Israeli position, Muhammad would have been hit in the lower limbs only. Jean-Claude Schlinger, "Ballistics report prepared for Karsenty", 19 February 2008.Adi Schwartz, "Independent expert: IDF bullets didn't kill Mohammed al-Dura", Haaretz, 3 February 2008. France 2's lawyer, Francis Szpiner, counsel to former President of France Jacques Chirac, called Karsenty "the Jew who pays a second Jew to pay a third Jew to fight to the last drop of Israeli blood," comparing him to 9/11 conspiracy theorist Thierry Meyssan and Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson. Karsenty had it in for Enderlin, Szpiner argued, because of Enderlin's even-handed coverage of the Middle East.

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