Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

17 Sentences With "more rancorous"

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

What do we do about bankers who are more rancorous than the principals?
Corbynism will make the country poorer, the infrastructure shoddier and political life more rancorous.
But it might be even more rancorous for them back in their home districts.
The first is a split over Donald Trump far more rancorous and damaging than most non-evangelicals appreciate.
The overall tone was polite, in contrast to a more rancorous fourth debate between the three last week.
It has grown, if anything, more rancorous, with local elected officials castigating City Hall for not listening to parents' concerns.
The injection of the politically charged border wall into the tax reform discussion has only served to make the debates more rancorous.
But more recently, doubts have arisen over Trump's ability to deliver on the agenda as the effort to repeal Obamacare grew more rancorous.
"The debate is more rancorous now than it was in the run-up to the (2016) referendum," she said, declining to give her surname.
"My only big regret is that our politics are even more polarized and that our parties are even more rancorous over the last seven years," he said.
She appeared in command on the stage, and essentially declined to attack Mr. Sanders, even though the race had grown more rancorous, and though he was deeply critical of her earlier in the evening.
Almost no one likes the deal that Kings owner Vivek Ranadivé and GM Vlade Divac made for Cousins, who is considered one of the more talented if also more rancorous players in the NBA.
His trip to Nebraska, a Republican "red state," is meant to help promote the big-picture ideas he laid out in his final State of the Union speech on Tuesday, where he said he regretted American politics had become more rancorous.
As standoffs between red states and blue cities grow more rancorous, the tactics of pre-emption laws have become personal and punitive: Several states are now threatening to withhold resources from communities that defy them and to hold their elected officials legally and financially liable.
" However, Obama did say that he felt that politics in general was becoming more "rancorous" and that he felt that the media was party to blame with "talk radio habits creeping into politics" and likening some of the things that politicians say to "the comments section" or "trolling.
The taxidermy doesn't seem to work out well, as the bobcat had a smile on its face and the flamingo's neck was crooked. Added to that is the fact that Daisy Fay's father didn't add bread to the hamburgers, and his drinking increased. Daisy's parents relationship gets even more and more rancorous, with them fighting over money and various infidelities. In fact, one argument was so bad that Mrs.
As such, he spent much of his time in the city and, as historian Joseph L.J. Kirlin wrote in 1909, discipline "became more and more relaxed." The ongoing dispute between the lay trustees of St. Mary's Church and the church hierarchy grew more rancorous when de Barth assigned a new priest, William Hogan, to the diocese in 1820. Hogan instantly took the side of the trustees against de Barth; Hogan's unusual behavior would eventually cause his excommunication, but not until de Barth's tenure as apostolic administrator had ended. After a vacancy of five years, the see of Philadelphia found a new bishop in Henry Conwell, an Irish-born priest who was installed in 1819 and arrived the next year, freeing de Barth to return to Conewago.

No results under this filter, show 17 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.