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"unremittingly" Definitions
  1. without ever stopping
"unremittingly" Synonyms
all the time constantly perpetually endlessly continually continuously incessantly interminably always ceaselessly eternally unceasingly relentlessly permanently remorselessly entire time day and night without a break night and day day in, day out carefully meticulously thoroughly attentively methodically painstakingly concentratedly conscientiously delicately fastidiously intently precisely punctiliously scrutinizingly sedulously thoughtfully watchfully alertly correctly doggedly actively busily industriously diligently earnestly energetically enthusiastically expeditiously fervently indefatigably laboriously purposefully resolutely vigorously ardently arduously assiduously determinedly inexorably inescapably inevitably unavoidably irrevocably unrelentingly unstoppably unyieldingly persistently unabatingly unpreventably imminently ineluctably impreventably unalterably unescapably impendingly unfailingly completely entirely perfectly totally utterly absolutely downright fully quite clean profoundly properly really altogether categorically consummately heartily incontrovertibly positively ruthlessly mercilessly callously pitilessly heartlessly hardly cruelly unfeelingly inhumanly unsympathetically harshly unmercifully insensitively uncharitably unsparingly inhumanely brutally stonily severely unrelievedly unmitigatedly outrightly unqualifiedly chronically purely thoroughgoingly unequivocally downrightly unreservedly gruellingly(UK) gruelingly(US) difficultly demandingly toughly exactingly challengingly strenuously taxingly heavily formidably toilsomely rigorously testingly onerously roughly irrepressibly uncontrollably unrestrainedly wildly unmanageably intractably unconstrainedly unquenchably uncontainably incorrigibly insuppressibly unrulily undisciplinedly unbridledly ungovernably disorderlily plentifully abundantly extensively profusely voluminously countlessly infinitely innumerably numerously aboundingly bounteously bountifully generously immeasurably limitlessly manifoldly multitudinously rifely superabundantly More

128 Sentences With "unremittingly"

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

The level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere grows unremittingly.
The tone of all of them is not unremittingly bleak.
Which makes it sound unremittingly bleak, which is not the case.
Instead, Guardiola, the Manchester City manager, has been unremittingly, unapologetically positive.
All of these tropes are conveyed unremittingly, caustically, and one could add, redundantly.
Turkey's relations with the United States have been unremittingly rotten for some time.
I was unremittingly harsh to the worst transgressor of all: the bandwagon fan.
For the ringgit, the trend since the U.S. election results has been unremittingly negative.
Eighner found the city "unremittingly barren and ugly," and poorly designed for pedestrian use.
Dikotter describes the experience as an unremittingly terrible time of suffering, hunger, rape and abuse.
But Kraft's problems suggest that unremittingly squeezing expenses can make it harder to stay competitive.
This has been your obligatory piece of uplifting news to round out an unremittingly awful year.
Reuben's friends are unremittingly kind: "I used to wet my pants all the time," they say.
While I took some amazing literature classes later in high school, ninth grade was unremittingly bleak.
Roman Reigns beat the Undertaker in a stinker of a match that was unremittingly painful to watch.
Even today, Beirut, which is washed gently by the Mediterranean Sea and ringed by mountains, remains unremittingly hedonistic.
The console launched in late 2005, when I was studying in an unremittingly bleak, booze-drenched Welsh seaside town.
Coe's vision of the scene is unremittingly bleak, with uniformed human-animal hybrids firing bullets into the bodies of prostrate protestors.
But to be fair, Samsung had about two years of almost unremittingly blah quarterly results before it finally got a break.
When something is too creamy, too spongy, too soft, too airy, unremittingly smooth, chewy or mushy, that's when we miss crunch.
Tool emerged, a quarter century ago, as an awesome new kind of prog band: precise but unremittingly heavy, all rumbles and hums.
For the first third of this book, Ms. Patchett presents a miserable, unremittingly hellish vision of family life, child-rearing in particular.
He's frustrating fodder for that eternal question: How could someone with such elegant, sensitive visions be so unremittingly willful, tyrannical, unfeeling, ungiving?
The events of November 4 have shown that change would not just be swift, but also seismic, extending unremittingly beyond the kingdom's boundaries.
More important, despite his unremittingly negative assessment, Smith is neither a partisan nor a polemicist; he's a historian and his conclusions carry weight.
By the same token, demagogic dictators have proved unremittingly hostile to monarchy because the institution represents a dangerously venerated alternative to their ambitions.
Brahms's Symphony No. 2, a work that demands patience, was agitated and loud, doggedly metronomic, unremittingly intense even where serenity was called for.
For that reason, King calls Pet Sematary his most frightening work, and likened it more to an unremittingly grim thought exercise than a novel.
Working-class wages are stagnating, jobs are harder to come by—and people make bad decisions, sometimes unremittingly, like many members of Vance's family.
These speakers will paint a vastly different picture of the country and its future than the unremittingly dark and dangerous one portrayed by the Republicans.
As for the 111 individuals who used it, they were able to achieve a gentle dying process instead of suffering unremittingly for their final days.
There is no "12 Years a Slave" brutality, no sadism à la "The Revenant," nothing as unremittingly frenetic as "Mad Max: Fury Road" — at least not yet.
For one, the role of Gardner gives Smith a chance to employ his endless gift for charisma while working with material that is often and unremittingly bleak.
No one foresaw this result—certainly not Mr Santos and the FARC leaders, who celebrated the deal with premature pomp, nor Mr Uribe, who campaigned unremittingly against it.
Rosenhan had a story to tell about miserable institutions that abused their power, and here was a data point that would have complicated such an unremittingly grim portrait.
Directing his first feature (from a screenplay by Nable), Stephen McCallum fashions an unremittingly vicious, leather-and-ink slugfest whose women are just as distasteful as its men.
That's a deeply sobering marker but one that has no place in "12 Strong," which starts as a recruitment ad before settling into a tense, unremittingly brutal combat movie.
An unremittingly confrontational personal style that appears to be alienating a broad swath of female voters, including some of the non-college white women who helped drive his 2016 victory.
Now is the time for me to pass on that outrage by clearly and unremittingly denouncing the people who used a wave of white anger to take the White House.
"Gone" (season 1063, episode 1053) One of the biggest problems of season six is its attempt to be simultaneously slapstick and silly (the Trio) and unremittingly dark and grim (everything else).
UK referendum campaign resumes Those arguing for Britain to stay in the EU have focused, pretty unremittingly, on the economy, and the potential risk to British voters of an exit (a "Brexit").
Donald J. Trump and Hillary Clinton collided in an almost unremittingly hostile debate on Sunday night, a 90-minute spectacle of character attacks, tawdry allegations, and Mr. Trump's startling accusation that Mrs.
A pan serves up the dramatic tension on a platter: The people trying to sell you a book (or movie or play) insist that it's great, and here's why it's unremittingly awful.
Repurposing the former hospital as a commercial and storage space has proven an innovative, if unusual, way of reversing what would likely have been an unremittingly sad story concluding with a wrecking ball.
He promptly signed with the team for a $22016,22022 bonus—exactly the amount assigned to the slot by Major League Baseball—and was thereafter dropped into the unremittingly unglamorous world of the rookie-ball Gulf Coast League.
Efforts in advancing China-Japan ties should "persevere unremittingly to prevent the appearance of new twists and turns" so that previous efforts did not go to waste, said Li at a joint briefing with Abe on Friday.
That might seem like a platitude, but this establishment is Nutella-themed in the way that Cheerios are an 'o'-themed breakfast cereal, or "Work" by Rihanna is ostensibly a song about working: unremittingly so, through rote repetition.
"The policy of effectively taking hostages, and that's how it looks, makes it very difficult for those who want a different relationship with Iran to get on the front foot with those who regard it as unremittingly hostile," Burt added.
Clear-sighted as it is, Faiz's poetry — celebrated for its ability to balance a delicate, classical formalism of diction and structure with political awareness and a conversational tone — is unremittingly tender: a love letter to a place and a people beset by violence.
Raison says the timeline is key; parents should perk up if, for two to three weeks, their children are "unremittingly down," feeling hopeless and negative, if they start to withdraw from friends and activities, and if they experience dramatic changes in sleep.
But using drab does not mean creating unremittingly beige rooms: This is not part of the taupe takeover of interiors or even the achingly chic Martha Stewart stories featuring quietly tasteful spaces with collections of drabware and bowls of eggs in various shades of brown and blue.
For example, when confronted with a judgmental, unremittingly vanilla boyfriend, Keenan uses Hamlet's "nothing," a concept that sits at the center of the play as well as a word he uses to humiliate Ophelia, to mourn her loss even as it expresses the scorn of the vanilla boyfriend.
I speak, of course, of "Burn After Reading," the Coen brothers' pitch-black comedy about morons attempting spycraft in Washington, D.C., which upon first viewing seemed too unremittingly misanthropic, too grimly contemptuous of its characters, without the flashes of grace that illuminate the darkness in most Coen depictions of human folly.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Jaya Howey takes painting very seriously, and so, like every other committed and intelligent American painter mindful of the long and unremittingly self-reflective history of modern painting — not to mention our infinite glut of empty digital images — he finds himself in a very serious corner.
In fact, Adu herself is so unremittingly cool that's it's not surprising in the slightest that a cornball like Drake—a man who screams desperation in a voice even louder than a sixth former with a Mubi account and Strong Opinions on the future of the Labour party—has aligned himself with her.
At other times, I'm taken inside a Berlin nightclub — the kind that plays unremittingly repetitive electronic dance music so people can lose themselves — as the dancers weave in and out of the small enclaves they form, doing head rolls, splits, and my favorite move, deep squats in a turnout position with their legs at 90-degree angles.
The film's writer and director, Guillermo del Toro, and a co-writer, Cornelia Funke (author of the Inkheart trilogy), remain faithful to the script, but I don't recall this fabulistic story of a princess trying to return to her kingdom during a brutal war being so unremittingly dark, despite all the bloodshed and grotesque violence that saturated the tale.
Robinson is an archetypal MAAC star—flawed and unremittingly chesty in performing his defiance of those flaws; locally grown and nationally un-recruited; nonconforming relative to the prevailing aesthetic standards of big-time college basketball and egregiously so by pro basketball ones; undeniably capable of Getting Buckets in any conceivable basketball context and exquisitely attuned to the various ways in which he has been and remains underestimated.
Cui Xiuwen's "Underground 2" (2002), a covert recording of an unknown passenger on a subway train, suggesting that everyone is being spied on, and Zhang Peili's "Uncertain Pleasures" (1996)  — where, on a festoon of dismantled cathode screens dislocated patches of skin are scratched unremittingly — provokes reflection on the experience of being watched or of being coerced, concerns relevant both in and outside of China.
Businesspeople remained unremittingly hostile to this type of regulation, primarily on the grounds that it took away their main means of exercising discipline over their workers. This form of regulation was also eliminated shortly after Velasco lost power.
And he could bowl all day, off a 12-pace run. He was described by John Arlott as "shrewd, varied, and utterly accurate, beating down as unremittingly as February rain", and "the modern master of bowling in English conditions".
"Eder, Richard (February 12, 1977). "Film: 'Thieves,' Gulliver Among Brobdingnagians". The New York Times. 13. Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film one-and- a-half stars out of four and called it "a portrait of unhappy people, people unremittingly sad in a variety of tedious situations.
Vulture described Scott's sound as "unremittingly dark, syncretic, hi-res, and above all unnatural." Scott has said that he is a fan of Broadway theatre and would like to do an album of show tune covers. He has said that he would like to write his own musical in the future.
Scott Yanow, reviewing Lossing's As It Grows, commented that the pianist "is influenced by modern classical music to an extent but his playing is not unremittingly atonal. Instead, he leaves his impressionistic music open to all possibilities, mostly emphasizing dramatic ideas and unexpected silences."Yanow, Scott "Review". AllMusic. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
Writing for AllMusic, Scott Yanow gave the album 4.5 out of 5 stars, stating that "During the two lengthy pieces, [Jimmy] Lyons' passionate solos contrast with [Bill] Dixon's quieter ruminations while the music in general is unremittingly intense." In 2008, The New Yorker placed it at number 87 on the "100 Essential Jazz Albums" list.
Hunt especially writhed under the withering satire of Moore. During his later years, Hunt continued to suffer from poverty and sickness. He worked unremittingly, but one effort failed after another. Two journalistic ventures, the Tatler (1830–1832), a daily devoted to literary and dramatic criticism, and London Journal (1834–1835) failed even though the latter contained some of his best writing.
At the bottom of the scale were the ubiquitous discentes ("those learning") or medical apprentices. Roman doctors of any stature combed the population for persons in any social setting who had an interest in and ability for practicing medicine. On the one hand the doctor used their services unremittingly. On the other they were treated like members of the family; i.e.
Mickle and Damici specifically wanted to include happy moments and co-operation in the script, as they felt that many post-Apocalyptic films were unremittingly grey. Religious extremists were added to show their toxic effect on society. They also wanted to emphasize reality, and they avoided overly stylized action sequences. Mickle and Damici also wanted to emphasize more than just monsters and a vampire plague.
He discerned the Word and the Spirit endlessly present, active and innovative lifting the world from within, raising it into its future - giving us a huge hope in God and God's future, and inviting us intensively and unremittingly to participate in that, as we are drawn through divine love into levels of existence of which we can hardly begin to imagine or dare to dream.
Cinevue gave the film a rating of four stars out of five, stating that "if you stay the course with its unremittingly dark tone, offers profound insight, that is does not fail to move in its final, heartbreaking scenes." While filmsquebec gave the film a three stars out of five, only highlighting its successes of the interpretation, and the aesthetic qualities of the film.
The Angel and the Dark River was arguably the release that saw the band travel furthest from their death metal origins. Aaron Stainthorpe dispensed with his death grunt entirely, and Martin Powell's violin and keyboard playing now seemed to be the basis around which the rest of the arrangement was built. Apart from the final track of the original release ("Your Shameful Heaven"), the tempo was unremittingly slow.
" Pop Matters was highly critical of the album, claiming that Alive was "an album that deals in a calculated sort of emotional manipulation that comes up short of its targets in every conceivable way." About.com said that the album is, "Filled with lumbering, spiritual- themed songs" and "so unremittingly bombastic that...anyone who isn’t already a sucker for Live’s pseudo-uplifting songs will easily resist Kowalczyk’s barrel-chested fervor.
Because of Karen's betrayal of Leopold, Bennett and Royle qualified The House in Paris as "Bowen's most rigorous and unremittingly clairvoyant elaboration of the structure and effects of psychic trauma. The House in Paris is what we propose to call a traumaturgy, both a work and theory of wounds."Bennett and Royle 43. Finally, Ray betrays the Grant Moody foster family by stealing Leopold at the novel's close.
He commented that the band incorporated "fast but brutal punk, fuzz-toned psychedelia and judicious folk- rock, all of it sounding more spontaneous than before." Pareles felt that the band continued to be "unremittingly glum", and described the majority of the songs as "tortured first-person proclamations". Pareles concluded, "Vedder sounds more alone than ever." Time reviewer Christopher John Farley singled out "Bugs" as one of the album's "share of stinkers".
The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow awarded the album 3½ stars stating "The performances are concise with all but four songs being under three minutes and seven under two, but the interpretations are unremittingly violent. The lack of variety in either mood or routine quickly wears one out".Yanow, S. Allmusic Review accessed July 22, 2011 The album was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.
The New York Times called Child 44 a "tightly woven", "ingeniously plotted", "high-voltage story". The Sunday Telegraph praised it as a "memorable debut": "the atmosphere of paranoia and paralysing fear is brilliantly portrayed and unremittingly grim". Kirkus Reviews gave it a starred review, calling it "smashing"; "nerve-wracking pace and atmosphere camouflage wild coincidences". In an Observer review, Peter Guttridge praised it as a "thrilling, intense piece of fiction".
" Stead also considered that with the words of the police captain "Mr. Fleming seems to have summarized in this character's remarks some of the recent strictures on James Bond's activities." Vernon Scannell, as critic for The Listener, considered The Spy Who Loved Me to be "as silly as it is unpleasant". What aggrieved him most, however, was that "the worst thing about it is that it really is so unremittingly, so grindingly boring.
After its Toronto premiere, Variety lauded the film as "a modest triumph of fearless acting and pointed social commentary". Its release in the United States drew similar praise. "Ristovski needs us to feel his nation's torment, and he succeeds," wrote the New York Daily News. The Hollywood Reporter found the film's treatment of Marko's story "unremittingly grim and powerful", while TV Guide praised it for being "tense [and] gripping" as well as "starkly beautiful".
Middle Dodd is rarely climbed for its own sake, being merely a stop on the road to Red Screes. The nose of the fell provides the obvious route, starting from either Kirkstonefoot or Cow Bridge. This is unremittingly steep, but even harsher gradients can be found by making a pathless ascent from Red Pit on the Kirkstone road. A direct route contouring from Scandale Pass is also possible, but most would proceed via Red Screes from this point.
Citation: > The Navy Cross is awarded to Commander Allen Buchanan, U.S. Navy, for > distinguished service in the line of his profession as commanding officer of > the U.S.S. Downes, engaged in the important, exacting and hazardous duty of > patrolling the waters infested with enemy submarines and mines, in escorting > and protecting vitally important convoys of troops and supplies through > these waters, and in offensive and defensive action, vigorously and > unremittingly prosecuted against all forms of enemy naval activity.
Hutchmeyer is a brash American publisher, known for publishing unremittingly commercial books. He never reads the books he publishes, and considers authors to be useless members of society, good only for helping him make money. Baby Hutchmeyer is Hutchmeyer's long suffering wife. Unlike her husband, she is well read and worldly, although she longs to be free of her life as what she sees as a rich man's plaything, and is tired of her husband's infidelities.
For several years, he devoted himself unremittingly to his profession but, in 1841, succeeded fellow Dartmouth graduate Daniel Webster in the United States Senate. Shortly afterwards he delivered an address at the memorial services for President William Henry Harrison at Faneuil Hall. In the Senate, he spoke on the tariff, the Oregon boundary, in favor of the Fiscal Bank Act, and in opposition to the annexation of Texas. On Webster's re-election to the Senate in 1845, Choate resumed his law practice.
Scene from the Caves of Ulysses, at Sorrento (1841) In September 1836, Collins left London for Italy, where he remained until 1838. During these two years he occupied himself unremittingly in advancing his knowledge of painting, but had to return due to illness. He then began a series of pictures depicting Italian life including Poor Travellers at the door of a Capuchin Convent near Vico, Bay of Naples See and A Scene near Subiaco, which were exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1839.
' The film Lang made turned out to be The Metropolis, an unremittingly dark vision of a modern industrial city. Other early cinematic representations of cities in the twentieth century generally depicted them as technologically efficient spaces with smoothly functioning systems of automobile transport. By the 1960s, however, traffic congestion began to appear in such films as The Fast Lady (1962) and Playtime (1967). Literature, film, and other forms of popular culture have supplied visions of future cities both utopian and dystopian.
The flanks above Wasdale are unremittingly steep, of grass and scree with little to break the monotony. The only stream on these slopes is Ill Gill, falling from the depression between the summit and the east top. Great End and Scafell Pike seen from Kirk Fell Tarn between the two summits To the west, between Kirk Fell and Pillar, is Black Sail Pass. This is a pedestrian route from Wasdale to Ennerdale, and from there onward via Scarth Gap to Buttermere.
"These Days (I Barely Get By)" is a song by American country singer George Jones. It was one of the few compositions that Jones composed with then wife Tammy Wynette. The song was released on the 1974 Epic retrospective The Best of George Jones, which also featured "The Door." The song is unremittingly bleak, recalling Jones' earlier hit single "Things Have Gone to Pieces," and reflected the dismal relationship that now existed between Jones and Wynette, who would divorce early the following year.
"How does a writer tell the story of a traumatised nation without being unremittingly bleak? NoViolet Bulawayo manages it by forming a cast of characters so delightful and joyous that the reader is seduced by their antics at the same time as finding out about the country's troubles. ... Bulawayo has created a debut that is poignant and moving but which also glows with humanity and humour." — The IndependentLeyla Sanai, "Review: We Need New Names, By NoViolet Bulawayo", The Independent on Sunday, 17 August 2013.
Panty & Stocking received a polarized reaction from critics. Carl Kimlinger of Anime News Network found the show to be "unremittingly revolting" and "generally not funny". Anime News Network's individual episode reviews were equally critical, accusing the series more than once of having a style-over-substance approach and generally flawed, tasteless and needlessly disturbing comedy in spite of its impressive production values. Reviewer Gia Manry found the visuals and sounds to be overwhelming and the writing substandard, ending in a 1 out of 5 score.
On 13 May 2005, he announced his implacable opposition to the government's proposal to establish a Reconciliation and Unity Commission, with the power to grant compensation to victims of the 2000 coup, and amnesty to perpetrators of it. He agreed with detractors who called it a sham to grant amnesty to supporters of the government who had played roles in the coup. His attack on the legislation, which continued unremittingly throughout May and June and into July, further strained his already tense relationship with the government.
35; and Orenstein, p. 26 The music of Auber, Halévy and especially Meyerbeer was regarded as the correct model for students, and old French music such as that of Rameau and modern music, including that of Wagner were kept rigorously out of the curriculum.Nectoux, p. 269 Dubois was unremittingly hostile to Maurice Ravel who, when a Conservatoire student, did not conform to the faculty's anti-modernism, and in 1902 Dubois unavailingly forbade Conservatoire students to attend performances of Debussy's ground-breaking new opera, Pelléas et Mélisande.
He himself differentiated between his principled stance and quotidian conduct. Believing it could be implemented only carefully, he was moderate in practice and remained personally observant. Second only to Geiger, Rabbi Samuel Holdheim distinguished himself as a radical proponent of change. While the former stressed continuity with the past, and described Judaism as an entity that gradually adopted and discarded elements along time, Holdheim accorded present conditions the highest status, sharply dividing the universalist core from all other aspects that could be unremittingly disposed of.
The Poem of the End (with "The" in the title) is a major poem by the White Russian symbolist poet Marina Tsvetaeva. Written in Prague in 1924, the poem details the end of a passionate affair with Konstantin Boeslavovich Rozdevitch, a former military officer. Each of the sections deals with the crossing of a bridge and the symbolism is echoed relentlessly throughout the poem; the mood is unremittingly tense and foreboding. :Lovers for the most :part are without hope: passion :also is just :a bridge, a means of connection (from the Elaine Feinstein translation).
Richard Howe, from a mezzotint engraving by R. Dunkarton, after the painting by John Singleton Copley The Howe brothers had been granted authority as peace commissioners by Parliament, with limited powers to pursue a peaceful resolution to the conflict. King George III was not optimistic about the possibility of a peace, "yet I think it right to be attempted, whilst every act of vigour is unremittingly carried on".Ketchum (1973), p. 94 Their powers were limited to granting of "general and special pardons" and to "confer with any of his Majesty's subjects".
After the above-mentioned date till the 12th Congress of the party in December 2000, he was chosen as a member of Political Bureau and elected afterwards as the Vice-General Secretary. Since the 12th Congress up to the 13th Congress he unremittingly carried out his duties as a member of Political Bureau. He promotes federalism as a model for governance and power sharing in Iran. In his view, federalism must be based on geography and ethnicity, and this helps in resolving grievances of different ethnic groups in Iran.
It was cautiously noted in the contemporary Press that Feilberg 'has had very definite political opinions, and, in labouring unremittingly to impress them upon the public mind, has suffered at various times from the misrepresentation and obloquy which every active politician is fated to encounter'.Queenslander 10 June 1882. p712 (reprint from Brisbane Courier Mon. 5 June 1882, p2g) The background was a change in the proprietorship of the Brisbane Newspaper Company in late December 1880 which caused Feilberg to endure a year of being gradually relegated to steadily more subordinate positions on the journal.
In 2005, the Qarase government amid much controversy proposed a Reconciliation and Unity Commission with power to recommend compensation for victims of the 2000 coup and amnesty for its perpetrators. However, the military, especially the nation's top military commander, Frank Bainimarama, strongly opposed this bill. Bainimarama agreed with detractors who said that to grant amnesty to supporters of the present government who had played a role in the violent coup was a sham. His attack on the legislation, which continued unremittingly throughout May and into June and July, further strained his already tense relationship with the government.
Muslims, combatants and non-combatants alike, were killed unremittingly, as illustrated in this contemporary account describing the capture of the village of Čučuge, near Ub, in April 1806: Serbs who neglected to join the uprising were brutalized in equal measure. Males who could not produce an adequate excuse for why they were not fighting were killed and their houses torched. While most of the rebels were Serbs, the Pashalik's Romani (Gypsy) residents, the majority of whom were Muslim, also fought on the rebel side. Some Albanians also pledged allegiance to Karađorđe and fought on his behalf.
Navy Cross awarded for actions during World War I Citation: > The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting > the Navy Cross to Lieutenant Commander Oscar Charles Badger (NSN: 0-7626), > United States Navy, for distinguished service in the line of his profession > as Commanding Officer of the U.S.S. WORDEN, engaged in the important, > exacting and hazardous duty of patrolling the waters infested by enemy > submarines and mines, protecting vitally important convoys of troops and > supplies through these waters and in offensive and defensive action, > vigorously and unremittingly prosecuted against all forms of enemy naval > activity during the World War.
83 According to Richardson, Petech asserts Gushri appointed Rapten as 'minister-regent' to conduct civil affairs even before he 'offered the sovereignty to the Dalai Lama'; also that Tucci thought this was Gushri's way of controlling Tibet through Rapten, setting the stage for a power struggle between Gushri and a "crafty and ambitious" Dalai Lama; Tucci even describes Rapten as 'an insignificant character whom the Dalai Lama had no difficulty in dominating'. Richardson, however, considered it difficult to reconcile Rapten's unremittingly domineering pro-Gelugpa activity pre-1642 with a sudden lapse into nonentity from that date on.
On the whole, "Ogunde" was well received by critics. Discussing Coltrane's music in the months prior to his death in July 1967, jazz musician and educator Bill Cole noted that although Coltrane's "recording output during 1967 ... was sparse," the "quality and strength, especially on his piece 'Ogunde', show no detrimental effects from his illness."Cole, John Coltrane, p. 195. Jazz commentator Scott Yanow praised The Olatunji Concert for its "unremittingly intense music", but called it "largely unlistenable except by true fanatics" due to poor recording quality, stating that the recording "should have remained legendary and unissued".
Qoser was made known by the public after she sharply and unremittingly questioned Hong Kong officials at press conferences following the 2019 Yuen Long Attack. While supported by many, her three-year long probation as a civil servant was extended by 120 days following a management decision to reopen the investigations on her performance, and she would be dismissed if she rejected the terms. Members of The RTHK Program Staff Union has called the decision “unjustified suppression” and "baseless act derailing from established staff management regulations". Pro-Beijing groups have vilified Qoser, even directing disrespectful and racial slurs at her.
German trenches demolished by artillery Byng ordered 1st Canadian Division commander Major-General Arthur Currie to organize a careful attack against the German positions at Mont Sorrel and Tor Top. Due to the casualties suffered during the unsuccessful counterattack of 3 June, Currie regrouped his stronger battalions into two composite brigades. Four intense bombardments of thirty minutes each were carried out between 9 and 12 June in an effort to deceive the Germans into expecting immediate attacks, which did not transpire. For ten hours on 12 June all the German positions between Hill 60 and Sanctuary Wood were shelled unremittingly.
Some time afterward he spent six months in Paris under Lambert, and then rejoined Wieniawski at Brussels Conservatory, where he studied unremittingly for three years. After winning a prize at a national competition held in Belgium, he made a successful tour through the Netherlands. Upon his return to America he played with Theodore Thomas' orchestra in New York City, and gave a number of recitals in other cities. After spending three years more in Europe, Lichtenberg gave another series of concerts in America, after which he settled for some time in Boston, Massachusetts, as a member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
In Galicia especially, hostility towards it defined the Haskalah to a large extent, from the staunchly observant Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Chajes and Joseph Perl to the radical anti-Talmudists like Osias Schorr. The Enlightened, who revived Hebrew grammar, often mocked their rivals' lack of eloquence in the language. While a considerable proportion of the Misnagdim were not adverse to at least some of the Haskala's goals, the Rebbes were unremittingly hostile. The most distinguished Hasidic leader in Galicia in the era was Chaim Halberstam, who combined Talmudic erudition and the status of a major decisor with his function as tzaddiq.
Unbeknownst to JM, BG's grandfather owns the car and she is leading JM to him not to consummate the car's sale but in order to kill the old man. In the course of their journey through an unremittingly hostile world inhabited by cruel outback men and women, the couple become friends and, after JM teaches BG how to dance, tentative lovers. BG eventually finds her grandfather and confronts him in his rundown opal mine. She had planned to shoot him but, having reconciled her past in the course of the trip and found someone who genuinely cares for her, decides not to go ahead with it.
Critic Roger Ebert gave the film 3.5 stars out of 4, and called it "painfully and unremittingly intense" and a "superb example of filmmaking craft". He also stated that "when I walked out of the theater, there were knots in my stomach from the film's roller-coaster ride of violence." Walter Goodman of The New York Times said it was a "flaming, flashing, crashing, crackling blow-'em-up show that keeps you popping from your seat despite your better instincts and the basically conventional scare tactics." Time magazine featured the film on the cover of its issue of , 1986, calling it the "summer's scariest movie".
On 13 May 2005, Bainimarama spoke out against the proposal, calling it "Reconciliation bull" and vowing that he and the military would oppose the legislation, which detractors say is a sham to grant amnesty to supporters of the present government who played roles in the coup. His attack on the legislation, which continued unremittingly throughout May and into June, further strained his already tense relationship with the government. On 5 June, Bainimarama reiterated his opposition to the proposed reconciliation commission, and said that if the government continued to "bulldoze" it through Parliament, he would be forced to "open up." He did not elaborate on what he meant by that.
Sofía Ochoa and Verónica Sánchez of En Filme were critical about the fact that Pérez was "flat", with no further explaining on how Andrade achieved his domain over women, "drawing a caricature of a public figure, [that] not only was complex and imposing, he was talented to some extent, very Machiavellian, ambitious, egotistical, narcissistic and unscrupulous". David Noh of Film Journal International also gave a negative review, since the actor "is too unremittingly slimy and completely lacking in magnetic charisma to be convincing as such an irresistible and titanic A&R; lothario". In Mexico, Pérez was nominated for a Diosa de Plata and won the Ariel Award for Best Actor for Gloria.
According to the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, the 2007 and 2009 California Health Interview Surveys (CHIS) demonstrate continued mental health needs of almost two million Californians, about half of which were unmet in 2011. In spite of steady tax revenue ($7.4 billion raised as of September 2011) earmarked for the MHSA, the unremittingly high numbers of mentally ill who lack treatment contrast starkly with the implementation of new programs like the FSPs, which may cost tens of thousands of dollars annually per person. The MHA Village program, for example, averages around $18,000 annually per person. One of the major growing concerns regarding MHSA implementation is its unintentional but worrying tendency to create silos of care.
In Etica e politica (1931), Croce defines liberalism as an ethical conception of life that rejects dogmatism and favors diversity, and in the name of liberty and free choice of the individual, is hostile to the authoritarianism of fascism, communism, and the Catholic Church. While Croce realizes that democracy can sometimes threaten individual liberty, he sees liberalism and democracy as predicated on the same ideals of moral equality and opposition to authority. Furthermore, he acknowledged the positive historic role played by the Socialist parties in Italy in their struggles to improve conditions for the working class, and urged modern socialists to swear off dictatorial solutions. In contrast to the socialists, who Croce viewed as part of modernity along with liberals, his condemnation of reactionaries is unremittingly harsh.
While affirming their loyalty, these humble figures labored to define an English identity from below that was drawn from native, popular traditions going back to Langland and Chaucer. To the extent that the popular opposition between plain and ornate, honest and dissembling was associated with courtiers, (South European) foreignness and Catholicism, the plowman tradition continued to be anti-Catholic and staunchly Protestant. This popular image of the English commonwealth is often defined in the Elizabethan era in opposition to Catholic nations and "Rome," which are represented as less free and unvirtuous. Hutchins notes that "Even in the most unremittingly absolutist interpretations of Tudor theories of rule, the qualities that Elizabethans claim make a good ruler include dignified concern for the common people" (229).
The film begins with a narrator explaining German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche's infamous mental breakdown in Turin, Italy in 1889 after seeing a man continually whip his horse, which yet refused to move. After uttering his final words, "Mutter, ich bin dumm" ("mother, I am stupid"), Nietzsche becomes mute and demented, cared for by his family until his death a decade later. The film focuses on a pair of impoverished potato farmers, father and daughter, and their horse (stated by the narrator, literally or metaphorically, to be the same one seen by Nietzsche) living in the 19th century countryside where a violent wind blows unremittingly. They live out an arduous and repetitive existence defined by nihilistic despair; they often take turns sitting by the window alone.
Volkssturm units were supposed to be used only in their own districts, but many were sent directly to the front lines. Ultimately, it was their charge to confront the overwhelming power of the British, Canadian, Soviet, American, and French armies alongside Wehrmacht forces to either turn the tide of the war or set a shining example for future generations of Germans and expunge the defeat of 1918 by fighting to the last, dying before surrendering. It was an apocalyptic goal which some of those assigned to the Volkssturm took to heart. Unremittingly fanatical members of the Volkssturm refused to abandon the Nazi ethos unto the dying days of Nazi Germany, and in a number of instances took brutal "police actions" against German civilians deemed defeatists or cowards.
After the conclusion of the Siege of Isfahan, Mamud sent a contingent of his Afghans to subdue Qazvin where a new Safavid pretender Tahmasp had risen and proclaimed himself Shah. He was forced to flee Qazvin but could not stay in the region permanently as those areas not under Afghan control were unremittingly coming under the marching boots of Ottoman soldiers invading from the west. Tahmasp was chased from the west of the country and in Astarabad found a loyal if difficult subject warlord by the name of Fathali Khan of the Qajar clan. Deciding that it was too soon to march on Isfahan to liberate the heartland of Persia they would begin in Khorasan where they could forge alliances and rally more troops under their banner.
After the conclusion of the siege of Isfahan Mahmud sent a contingent of his Afghans to subdue Qazvin where a new Safavid pretender Tahmasp had risen and proclaimed himself Shah. He was forced to flee Qazvin but could not stay in the region permanently as those areas not under Afghan control were unremittingly coming under the marching boots of Ottoman soldiers invading from the west. Tahmasp was chased from the west of the country and in Astarabad found a loyal if difficult subject warlord by the name of Fathali Khan of the Qajar clan. Deciding that it was too soon to march on Isfahan to liberate the heartland of Iran they would begin in Khorasan where they could forge alliances and rally more troops under their banner.
Upon the outbreak of World War I he served as gunnery officer of until September 1917, after which he assumed command of . He was assigned to in February 1918, before taking command of the destroyer in May 1918. For > distinguished service…as Commanding Officer of the USS Benham engaged in the > important, exacting and hazardous duty of patrolling the waters infested > with enemy submarines and mines, in escorting and protecting vitally > important convoys of troops and supplies through these waters, and in > offensive and defensive action, vigorously and unremittingly prosecuted > against all forms of enemy naval activity, he was awarded the Navy Cross. From October 1918 to February 1919, he assisted in fitting out the destroyer at the Union Iron Works, San Francisco, but was detached before her commissioning.
The novel was well received by reviewers. Mal Peet, writing for The Guardian, praised "Kennen's narrative method"; stating that from the plot synopsis itself the novel may be seen to be "unremittingly bleak", however states that "the combination of point of view and pace urges the reader so swiftly on that there simply isn't time for the novel's Grand Guignol imagery to become ponderous"; concluding that "her grip on noir is as muscular as ever". Philip Womack, for The Daily Telegraph, found the novel to be "involving and scary" and called it an "ultra-modern story with a twist". The novel received a B rating from Wondrous Reads youth-fiction review website, with reviewer Jenny finding the novel to be a "fast-paced ... story of dares and boundaries".
In reply to Shirley's question about the part that married women are playing in the affairs of the country, her mother writes: > "The insistent demand of women for recognition in spheres of work outside > the home, which has quietly but unremittingly been advanced in the course of > the last hundred years, has grudgingly been conceded. As a doctor and a > Member of Parliament I am fully conscious of the fact that the doors both of > the medical schools and of the House of Commons had to be forced by furious > and frustrated women before their claims were recognized. It would be quite > inaccurate to suggest that we were welcomed into the universities or into > public life."(143) Summerskill constantly struggles for and raises consciousness about women's equal rights.
In 1984, following the success of the animated Christmas film The Snowman, Channel 4 commissioned another animation from TVC studios; producer John Coates approached Dianne Jackson and composer Howard Blake, suggesting Burningham's picture book Granpa. Blake was initially reluctant due to the book's upsetting ending, but was convinced after witnessing his own daughter's reaction to her grandfather's death that year. Fiona Collins noted in Turning the Page: Children's Literature in Performance and the Media that while Burningham's book is open ended, with Emily ultimately left alone to contemplate her grandfather's death, the film offers a less "stark" interpretation; his death is explored through her implied remembrance of him in the final scene. Collins suggests that this was probably because the original offered an unremittingly bleak ending that would be difficult for its intended child audience.
On 13 May 2005, Bainimarama spoke out against the proposal, calling it "Reconciliation bull" and vowing that he and the military would oppose the legislation, which detractors say is a sham to grant amnesty to supporters of the present government who played roles in the coup. His attack on the legislation, which continued unremittingly throughout May and into June, further strained his already tense relationship with the government. Bainimarama was supported by Army spokesman Captain Neumi Leweni, who said on 16 May that a meeting of senior officers had resolved to try to prevent the passage of the legislation. "We are not in favour of the Bill that proposes to offer amnesty for coup perpetrators in 2000, and will do all we can to oppose it," Leweni said.
Gibron felt that the episode's setting "reduces Millennium to a ridiculous movie of the week", adding that the voice-over narration makes it "a chore to sit through". Robert Shearman and Lars Pearson, in their book Wanting to Believe: A Critical Guide to The X-Files, Millennium & The Lone Gunmen, rated the episode three stars out of five, describing it as "a quirky failure". Shearman and Pearson felt that "The Wild and the Innocent" was a "curious mix of the cloyingly sentimental and the unremittingly bleak", finding similarities to the works of Cormac McCarthy; however, they felt that it did not work well as an episode of Millennium, finding the minimal involvement of the series' main characters and the distinct difference in setting to detract from the episode as a whole. A novelisation of the episode by Elizabeth Massie was published in 1988.
He was appointed to the United States Naval Academy in 1903, and graduated in 1908. Cogswell was awarded the Navy Cross for service during World War I, when he commanded the destroyers and . Cogswell's Navy Cross citation reads: > The Navy Cross is awarded to Lieutenant Commander Francis Cogswell, U.S. > Navy, for distinguished service in the line of his profession as commanding > officer of the U.S.S. Fanning and the U.S.S. McDougal, engaged in the > important, exacting and hazardous duty of patrolling the waters infested > with enemy submarines and mines, in escorting and protecting vitally > important convoys of troops and supplies through these waters, and in > offensive and defensive action, vigorously and unremittingly prosecuted > against all forms of enemy naval activity. In 1935, he commanded the , the flagship of a flotilla of minesweepers assisting the US Coast and Geodetic Survey in charting the Aleutian Islands.
McNeile had a quiet life after the war; his biographer Jonathon Green notes that "as in the novels of fellow best-selling writers such as P. G. Wodehouse or Agatha Christie, it is the hero who lives the exciting life". Although he was an "unremittingly hearty man", he suffered from delicate health following the war. He had a loud voice and a louder laugh, and "liked to enliven clubs and restaurants with the sight and sound of military good fellowship"; his friend and collaborator Gerard Fairlie described him as "not everybody's cup of tea", and commented that "he was loud in every possible way—in his voice, in his laugh, in his clothes, in the unconscious swagger with which he always motivated himself, in his whole approach to life". McNeile and his wife had two sons. On 13 June 1919 McNeile retired onto the reserve officer list and was confirmed in the rank of major.
Du bist gut comprises one CD of 15 songs (14 original, 1 reworking of a 2001 album track), and the “de luxe bonus edition” has a second CD comprising studio reworkings and live performances of earlier recordings. The album covers many of the themes running through Nena's previous work, “Freiheit” (Freedom) and “Frieden” (Peace) being obvious examples. However it differs from many of its predecessors in that there are fewer fast songs and in “Ich habe dich verloren” (I have lost you) Nena writes an unremittingly bleak lyric, which is unusual for one so accustomed to put a positive spin on all sorts of setbacks and misfortune. As ever, Nena experiments with stylistic variations including the 7-minute synthpop title track and the acoustic guitar backed “Lautlos” (Silently) which intimately showcases her voice and carefully crafted enunciation like few others have in her 30-year career. Throughout her career, Nena's lyrics have evoked imagery of flying as a sign of well being and so it is with “Deine Flügel brechen nicht”.
For his services in command of the Conyngham, Johnson was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal with citation as follows: > For exceptionally meritorious service in a duty of great responsibility as > Commanding Officer of the USS Conyngham engaged in the important, exacting > and hazardous duty of patrolling the waters infested with enemy submarines > and mines, in escorting and protecting vitally important convoys of troops > and supplies through these waters, and in offensive and defensive action, > vigorously and unremittingly prosecuted against all forms of enemy naval > activity; and especially for an attack upon an enemy submarine on October > 19, 1917, during which attack Conyngham was directly over the submarine and > dropped a depth bomb which is believed to have destroyed the submarine. Johnson fitted out and commanded the destroyer early in 1918. Upon his return to the United States later that year, he reported for duty as aide to the commandant, New York Navy Yard and Third Naval District. He served as commander, Air Force, Atlantic fleet, while simultaneously commanding Shawmut and later , in 1920 and 1921.
He was appointed by Governor Samuel W. McCall as food administrator and the executive manager of the Massachusetts Committee on Public Safety during World War I. His activities in these two posts kept him constantly in the public eye and it was through his interest in seeing that Massachusetts and New England kept its resources unremittingly behind the government in the prosecution of the war that he first entered the industrial field as an adjuster of disputes. As executive manager of the public safety committee he first directed a general inventory of the state s resources available to aid in the war. As food administrator he laid out a program of food conservation and regulation which was imitated throughout the nation. During this time he was a dollar-a-year man, taking only $1 in salary, and he tore up the lawn on the Sanderson Street side of his estate to grow potatoes and other vegetables in order to support the war effort and show the need for Victory Gardens.
A small group of fifteen surviving Carthusians was re-established in their old house at Sheen, as also were eight Dominican canonesses in Dartford. A house of Dominican friars was established at Smithfield, but this was only possible through importing professed religious from Holland and Spain, and Mary's hopes of further refoundations foundered, as she found it very difficult to persuade former monks and nuns to resume the religious life; consequently schemes for restoring the abbeys at Glastonbury and St Albans failed for lack of volunteers. All the refounded houses were in properties that had remained in Crown possession; but, in spite of much prompting, none of Mary's lay supporters would co-operate in returning their holdings of monastic lands to religious use; while the lay lords in Parliament proved unremittingly hostile, as a revival of the "mitred" abbeys would have returned the House of Lords to having an ecclesiastical majority. Moreover, there remained a widespread suspicion that the return of religious communities to their former premises might call into question the legal title of lay purchasers of monastic land, and accordingly all Mary's foundations were technically new communities in law.
Etty's alt=Large number of semi-naked people Etty exhibited the painting in February 1828 at the British Institution under the title of Venus Now Wakes, and Wakens Love. It immediately met with a storm of derision from critics for the style in which Venus was painted; one of the few positive reviews was that of The New Monthly Magazine, whose critic considered "the figure of Venus is delightfully drawn and most voluptuously coloured; and the way in which she awakens love, by ruffling the feathers of his wings, is exquisitely imagined and executed". The Times commented that "the drawing is free and flowing" and "the colouring, though rich, is perfectly natural", but felt that "the subject is, however, handled in a way entirely too luscious (we might, with great propriety, use a harsher term) for the public eye". The Literary Gazette conceded that the painting was "very attractive, especially in colour", but considered the painting's "voluptuousness" as "one of the most unpardonable sins against taste", and chided Etty's "careless" drawing, observing that "it is impossible that an artist who has for so many years, and so unremittingly, studied the living model, can err in that respect from want of knowledge".

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