No rivalry in Indian cricket was as intense yet as free from rancour as that between Kunderan and Faroukh Engineer. |
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Today, he still rejoices in his success but bears no rancour against those who delayed the day of his vindication. |
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Until today, the Coalition has coasted through this rift without rancour even though there's a huge divide between the two sides. |
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Mr Abbas, however, said this episode should not lead to any rancour in the hearts of the people in the two countries. |
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When differing versions of that line come into conflict, the result can be rancour, frustration, and political cynicism. |
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Deosaran's motion was delivered with passion, without rancour, and stuck mainly to the facts. |
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What really earns the rancour of the project's detractors though is the motivation behind it. |
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Fortunately, the split was relatively free of rancour, and her father remained a consistent presence and guiding spirit in her life. |
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Hence, they can deal with the forces of globalisation without rancour and adapt with a sense of cultural pride and confidence. |
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But the debates were good ones and, on the whole, discussions were held without rancour or venom. |
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The debate itself was a case study in the misinformation, obstinancy, subterfuge, rancour and fear that has characterised the fraught process. |
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Very often if that happens, then there is bitterness, rancour and unresolved issues and the strike simply drags on. |
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It was last winter that he left amid controversy and rancour. |
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But the rancour aroused by the coal-export proposal has become as toxic as a four-chimney belcher. |
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When we pay tribute to a member, with all the rancour that takes place around here, on days like today we all say nice things about each other. |
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It all marks a stark change from the rancour of the 1990s, when the two cities were locked in what seemed a never-ending dispute over air pollution. |
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Are their tears less objective and more objectionable than your rancour? |
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Recently the has rancour subsided except among conservative Evangelicals. |
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A fresh spirit swept over the country after the rancour of the Howard years. |
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Yet even now, amid the rancour at Hillsborough, Sinn Féin still appears to want to salvage the present power-sharing government. |
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After months of bickering, the talks have broken down in rancour, leaving the WTO leaderless since May 1st. |
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This level of rancour was building slowly over many years and this was the culmination of it. |
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If we can put aisde the partisanship and the rancour, this package will deliver for kids, Garrett says. |
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He does not seem to hear the rancour, the disappointment and the frustration that Atlantic Canadians have with the government. |
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In 2009, Armenia explored a rapprochement with Turkey, but the initiative failed to end decades of mutual rancour. |
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They offer rancour instead of substance, rhetoric instead of policy, despair instead of hope. |
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We must look beyond the smoke of war and avoid the easy temptations of recrimination and rancour. |
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It was the passionate, slightly muddled rancour of a disappointed man. |
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Under it the precious Constitution has been shipwrecked on the rocks of rejection and the budget is an unmitigated shambles, with rancour, as in Mr Juncker's speech today, being its currency. |
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With the courtesy that one nation knows for another, the Greeks have trodden a path of conciliation over anger, placation over rancour, humour over hostility. |
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The assorted Congress and BJP politicians managed to mingle without obvious rancour Jairam Ramesh, a former minister, made a point of jovially shaking lots of hands. |
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Like the Psalmist, you keep your soul on an even keel and silent, intervening only at the hour set by God, without animosity or feelings of rancour in spite of the many affronts which rain down upon you. |
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Such is the continuing rancour about the decision to invade Iraq in the first place that it is almost impossible to debate this question dispassionately. |
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Their three televised debates, and various public appearances around Australia, lacked the rancour that marked intramural competition during the Rudd-Gillard era. |
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If there is one thing that I do in the company of my dissident colleagues, it is to banish any rancour against my political adversaries from my soul. |
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He is able to talk without rancour of the schism between himself and the minister for public works in the New South Wales government, Davis Hughes. |
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The rancour between two of North America's three amigos, as the leaders of Canada, Mexico and the United States were once called, predates the visa problem. |
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It led to some rancour on occasions, partly because it meant that cases were being decided on unargued points, but partly also because the cases he cited tended not to support the propositons for which he invoked them. |
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The Queen's intervention showed the stakes could not have been higher for the pro-UK side, which had started the final countdown to the referendum amid rancour, divisions and bust-ups. |
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It is a guarantee of future confusion, of future rancour and conflict. |
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Instead he gets into political rancour and debate. |
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This would be a controversial move, particular as relates to overcoming ressentiment, since some but not all feelings of rancour are obliterated within capitalism. |
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Ladies and gentlemen, I know, I am a witness: poverty incites radicalization and nourishes a feeling of rancour, of bitterness which one day will be expressed in violence, which one day will lead to mass emigration. |
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There is a lot of rancour among the physicians in the town. |
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He can participate in fierce and partisan debates, but the rancour that one might find on this side of the curtain vanishes when we meet on the other side. |
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I would urge him to set aside partisanship and rancour from times past and consider the virtues of supporting a measure, which I am sure aligns with the fundamental principles of his party. |
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He has acquired that freedom from rancour and ressentiment that for Nietzsche constituted health. |
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The bill, together with various government colonisation schemes, contributed much towards the political rancour between Sinhalese and Tamil political leaders. |
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