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52 Sentences With "intractably"

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

The group was "intractably split over what to do," said one senior Buttigieg official.
" He foresees only endless, grinding, negative-sum cultural and political warfare between two intractably opposed "constitutions.
Murphy's greatest strength has always been coming up with new ways to reimagine systems that seem intractably broken.
The plot of the book centers on various actions and reactions as the two families become intractably intertwined.
I still don't take anything for granted when it comes to advancement in what remains an intractably sexist world.
Many in the party have embraced these ideas, in part as a reaction to the intractably partisan environment in Washington.
And some loyalists for the president continue to insist that the Mueller probe is "intractably infected with bias," as Rep.
In this desolate and often infuriating time, when so much seems broken and intractably grim, these paintings matter all the more.
In the months following Zelensky's election, Trump showed little interest in meeting him, believing Ukraine to be an intractably corrupt country.
It's a sequence that is world-weary in all senses—wise, complex, intractably sad—a debate about justice that can't be resolved.
The presence of 22 categories of property requiring resolution over the last 40 years has ended in the Cyprus talks becoming intractably complex.
And as Parliament, which remains intractably divided, is very unlikely to ratify anything Mr. Johnson presents, a No Deal exit looks far from impossible.
Deebot is not sentient but he does things that sentient beings do, such as move on his own and scream when intractably wrapped in cords.
In both, Valentin successfully applied his naturalistic mode to two of the most intractably artificial painting types of the period, the allegory and the altarpiece.
Britain has itself been polarised by Brexit and, even though an end-game appears to be in sight, the country is still intractably divided between leavers and remainers.
In the eyes of the world, they were suffering from a disease, and we were suffering from being intractably and disconsolately — and some might say self-indulgently — ourselves.
It's made for an exhausting and intractably complicated maze, and kudos to these two for figuring out how to survive long enough to get their business off the ground.
That seems to be the state of affairs: The gun laws seem intractably set, despite growing public support to change them, at least on the periphery of the laws.
Until Trump is willing to tamp down his adversarial rhetoric and behavior against Democrats and their voters, the prospects for political compromise on any matters of substance appear intractably grim.
In the 1970s and '72003s, feminism recalibrated the cultural understanding of rape so that the bar for determining what defined it was no longer set intractably at encounters like these.
It's a hushed, intractably sad scene, drawn in precise detail — naturalism I wouldn't expect from Ms. Ruhl, whose imagination is among the most adventurous at play today in the theater.
During the third set, when an intractably drunk audience member wouldn't stop talking loudly, I couldn't muster a witty retort and instead wished into the microphone that he was dead.
In 1968, with the Vietnam War raging controversially, cities burning with racial tension, and generations clashing obstreperously, America was as intractably divided as the one in which we live today.
The Socialists favour dialogue, but their other potential partner, Ciudadanos, is intractably against it—sadly, since in other ways it would act as a useful pro-market influence on Mr Sánchez.
To recap: Mandatory arbitration provisions in employment contracts have divided the federal appellate courts so intractably that the winners of two lower-court rulings agree the Supreme Court should reconsider their victories.
They include people like those in the study and people who have a genetic condition, familial hypercholesterolemia, that results in intractably high LDL levels and a grave risk of a heart attack.
In the West, however, Ms. Bhutto could count upon, right up to her assassination in 2007, her Ivy League-Oxbridge networks to present her as a valiant modernizer of her intractably backward people.
Has the left wing of the party become so discouraged, so defensive — and so embattled — that it now perceives a critical mass of whites as intractably hardened and unswervingly opposed to minority interests?
If Britain is to leave the E.U., it will, in all likelihood, have to enforce its border with Europe — a border that now lies, inconveniently and intractably, between Northern Ireland and the Republic.
However, as any experienced therapist will confirm, there is a point in any psychotherapy when the inclusion of an effective antidepressant is essential if the patient is to be prevented from becoming chronically and intractably depressed.
Those are the kinds of computational problems that are intractably hard for AI to capture because there's not enough data consistently available to model what's going to be the next utterance that somebody is saying using Spanglish.
At the same time, the association notes, more student-athletes across all three divisions reported feeling "intractably overwhelmed" than in previous surveys—a trend that mirrors the increase in mental health problems reported on college campuses more generally.
If the previously oblivious are listening now, or at least declaring as much, that gives cause for hope that we are not intractably divided by culture wars—that it's possible to have one's mind changed, and that it's a potential source of validation.
No matter the election, no matter how many resources Democrats like Richard Carmona (the party's U.S. Senate candidate in Arizona in 453) and Nunn have poured into these states, their white voters have remained intractably Republican, and the Democrats have seen diminishing returns among minority voters.
Even more intractably, Charleston and St Petersburg are themselves artefacts of genius and horror: two of the loveliest cities in the world, both are built on bones and haunted by the ghosts of war and injustice (including, in St Petersburg, those of the Nazi siege and Stalin's purges).
" 203th-century debate zingers Lincoln and Douglas emerged as national spokesmen for these intractably different viewpoints, and their clash climaxed during the Illinois Senate campaign of 1858 -- with Lincoln challenging Douglas' bid for a third term -- and the seven three-hour debates that "set the prairies on fire.
The Bronx — both famous for being the birthplace of hip-hop music and notorious for its intractably hardscrabble conditions in the 1980s — is in the midst of a revival that's both sparking effusive praise among real estate professionals and stirring dread among working class residents like White, who face the prospect of steepening living costs in one of the city's last bastions of affordable housing.
997 The result is a state of being overly fearful of surrounding peoples, and an intractably defensive attitude.
16 1872, pg. 3. Thereafter the facility was owned by Hawthorne alone and its fortunes were intractably bound up with his.
Decompressing aggressive inpatients: Breaking the aggression cycle to enhance positive outcome. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 6, 543-557.Caldwell, M. (1994). Applying social constructionism in the treatment of patients who are intractably aggressive. Hospital and Community Psychiatry, 45, 6-7.
Stochastic forensics is inspired by the statistical mechanics method used in physics. Classical Newtonian mechanics calculates the exact position and momentum of every particle in a system. This works well for systems, such as the solar system, which consist of a small number of objects. However, it cannot be used to study things like a gas, which have intractably large numbers of molecules.
David Bull Publishing, 2007. One of the primary flaws with the HF89/90 had been a persistent lack of front grip; combined with overwhelming amounts of rear downforce, this created an intractably imbalanced car with a significant tendency to understeer. On slow, twisty circuits typical of American racing, this was a major competitive disadvantage. Thus, on the MkIII, the team first focused on creating more front downforce.
Namely, it gives a superpolynomial speedup under the reasonable assumption that RSA, today's most common encryption protocol, is secure. Factoring has some benefit over other supremacy proposals because factoring can be checked quickly with a classical computer just by multiplying integers, even for large instances where factoring algorithms are intractably slow. However, implementing Shor's algorithm for large numbers is infeasible with current technology, so it is not being pursued as a strategy for demonstrating supremacy.
Cardinals Andicino della Porta and Conti followed Sforza, whom they had originally supported. The aforementioned cardinals plus Borja's own vote numbered 14, one short of the required two- thirds majority. However, Cardinals Carafa, Costa, Piccolomini, Cibò, and Zeno, followed by Medici, were unwilling to be bribed. Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere, followed by Basso, was intractably opposed to Borja's election. Thus, the eighty-six-year-old Gherardo, the Cardinal Patriarch of Venice, who was paid only 5,000 ducats,Chamberlin, 2003, p.
One dimensionless parameter characterizing a plasma is the ratio of ion to electron mass. Since this number is large, at least 1836, it is commonly taken to be infinite in theoretical analyses, that is, either the electrons are assumed to be massless or the ions are assumed to be infinitely massive. In numerical studies the opposite problem often appears. The computation time would be intractably large if a realistic mass ratio were used, so an artificially small but still rather large value, for example 100, is substituted.
Nazi SA guard shut-down trade union headquarters in Berlin, 2 May 1933 German Communists were among the first to be imprisoned in concentration camps. Their ties to the USSR concerned Hitler, and the Nazi Party was intractably opposed to communism. Rumors of communist violence were spread by the Nazis to justify the Enabling Act of 1933, which gave Hitler his first dictatorial powers. Hermann Göring testified at Nuremberg that Nazi willingness to repress German Communists prompted Hindenburg and the old elite to cooperate with them.
The conclave duly elected Bartolomeo Prignano, Archbishop of Bari, as Urban VI on 9 April, but the new pope proved to be intractably hostile to the cardinals. Some of them reconvened at Fondi in September 1378, declared the earlier election invalid and elected Robert of Geneva as their new pope, initiating the Western Schism. Robert assumed the name Clement VII and moved back to Avignon. Clement VII sent de Luna as legate to Spain for the Kingdoms of Castile, Aragon, Navarre, and Portugal, in order to win them over to the obedience of the Avignon pope.
Batibo Palace Tebo II in front of the palace The history of the Batibo Palace and Fondon is intractably linked to that of the entire Widikum tribe in the North Western Region of Cameroon. It dates as far back as to the mid 17th century, when lovebirds Tembeka and Akumaka defected from a wave of Bantu migrants and settled in Tegheben, in a quarter called Tad in today's Batibo, two miles south of the current Batibo palace. Tegheben is the site of the first palace of the Batibo Fondom. Njei Tegha who succeeded Tembeka evacuated his father's compound and erected his own palace at Gowi quarters, located about a mile north of Tegheben.
Ms. Farrow is so perfectly cast as Rachel that the character seems a distillation of nearly every role she has played since she was a teen-ager in Peyton Place. With her peaches-and-cream complexion and slightly whiny voice, Ms. Farrow has always epitomized a precocious, overgrown princess whose garrulity inspires protectiveness tinged with irritation. In Reckless, projecting a mixture of the sweetly forlorn and the intractably childish, she is nothing less than American innocence incarnate demanding to be snapped out of it."New York Times review Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said, "It's one of those films where you think it's only a dream, and then when everyone wakes up, it's worse . . .
1 Public Entrance 2 Plaza 3 Pond 4 Press Tower 5 Debating Chamber 6 Tower one 7 Tower two 8 Tower three 9 Tower four 10 Tower five, Cannongate Bldg. 11 Main Staircase 12 MSPs' Entrance 13 Lobby 14 Garden 15 Queensberry House 16 MSP building 17 Turf roof 18 Carpark and vehicular entrance 19 Landscaped park Miralles sought to design a parliament building that could represent and present a national identity. This intractably difficult question was tackled by displacing the question of identity into the landscape of Scotland. In a characteristically poetic approach he talked about slotting the building into the land "in the form of a gathering situation: an amphitheatre, coming out from Arthur's Seat." where the building would reflect a dialogue between the landscape and the act of people sitting.
Earl Harry Cochell (born May 18, 1922), is the only tennis player ever barred for life by the United States Tennis Association.Sidney B. Wood Jr., "Ilie Nastase; TANTRUM THROWERS THROUGH THE YEARS", New York Times, July 12, 1981 Cochell was ranked as high as No. 6 in the U.S. rankings before the 1951 U.S. National Championships (later the U.S. Open). In a fourth round match in that event against Gardnar Mulloy, Cochell, well known for a fiery temper and an intractably independent streak, became angry over a line call and tried to address the crowd by climbing up the chair umpire's ladder to take the microphone. Cochell was stopped from doing so and eventually lost the match to Mulloy, but afterwards, in a locker-room confrontation over the incident with tournament Referee S. Ellsworth Davenport, Cochell insulted Davenport with such abusive obscenity that, two days later, the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association (now the United States Tennis Association) banned him for life from the game and immediately dropped him from the rankings.
Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal felt the elaborate production designs were a misfire and likened the film to the Roaring Twenties themselves as Fitzgerald envisioned and criticized them, stating that what is "intractably wrong with the film is that there's no reality to heighten; it's a spectacle in search of a soul". The Chicago Reader review felt "Luhrmann is exactly the wrong person to adapt such a delicately rendered story, and his 3D feature plays like a ghastly Roaring 20s blowout at a sorority house". In The Atlantic, Christopher Orr observed that "The problem is that when the movie is entertaining it's not Gatsby, and when it's Gatsby it's not entertaining." The positive reviews included A. O. Scott of The New York Times, who felt the adaptation was "a lot of fun" and "less a conventional movie adaptation than a splashy, trashy opera, a wayward, lavishly theatrical celebration of the emotional and material extravagance that Fitzgerald surveyed with fascinated ambivalence"; Scott advised "the best way to enjoy the film is to put aside whatever literary agenda you are tempted to bring with you".

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