The MPs angered the party leadership in June by resigning the whip at Westminster in a row over policy. |
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What angered us last time was that the scheme was being done through the back door and we weren't informed about what was going on. |
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Australia Post angered unionists by bringing in supervisors and their families to scab on the strike. |
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The government has backed away from announcing changes to its controversial policy in a move that has angered both farming and green groups. |
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The fact that there was perhaps some justification to the taunts of the veterans angered him. |
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This angered the gods so much that they caused the lake to boil so the taniwha would be destroyed. |
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The BBC reported this story this morning and it is not often I am so angered by anything so early in the day. |
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The news angered officials at unions involved in pay disputes with both companies. |
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The edict has angered some officers, who feel the ruling is discriminatory. |
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Local residents and visitors are rightly angered and frustrated by the limited action being taken. |
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Yes, he has angered many colleagues by his high-handed behaviour during the past six years. |
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That angered me, I found that totally arrogant and I didn't wish to see him again. |
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The plans have angered nearby residents, who fear increased noise and traffic chaos. |
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The shift by Mr Gilchrist has angered some union leaders in Greater Manchester. |
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She was also angered that police chiefs had not apologised for the way the case had been handled. |
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The felling of a sycamore tree in Bradford on Avon has angered residents who petitioned for its survival. |
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The decision angered witnesses who say they wanted the chance to give evidence. |
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The bid had angered local residents who feared streets would be clogged up by hundreds of cars using the new estate. |
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What angered people was nowhere in the letter did it say the home was for elderly people. |
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The girls burst out with genuine laughter at him, which only angered him even more. |
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Staff were reportedly angered by the way the news was broken to them but have been ordered not to speak to the media. |
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Local residents have been angered by the Council's lack of action to keep the historic landmark. |
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Despite friendly native Kuna Indians, the Spanish were angered by these upstart Scots broaching their main gold route out of South America. |
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Matt glares back at me, angered by both my comment and the air quotes I added around the word. |
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Residents on the street were angered by the scheme and launched a campaign to stop it going ahead. |
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George adores Tom and is deeply saddened and angered when his father sells him. |
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She and the family are angered and appalled at what has been disclosed. |
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But the constant cry for help has angered German politicians especially, as the bulk of the refugees are heading there. |
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Alexander Litvinenko had angered the Kremlin with repeated claims that Putin was running a thuggish and brutal regime. |
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While it angered fans to see the comic strip depart the funny pages, the animated version gained serious attention. |
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Especially in the grain-producing areas, peasants were angered by the government's failure to protect them from the consequences of agrarian reform. |
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And red states, as their color portends, get angered really easily. |
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But the company's application to the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister for six road closures has angered some residents who fear they will be boxed in. |
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A leading Yorkshire independent school is dropping its Latin motto and centuries-old crest in favour of a multi-coloured star in a move that has angered traditionalists. |
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People driving along with phones stuck to their ears have long angered me. |
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Thinking that he had angered me into an outburst, surprise flashed over his face at my abrupt change in attitude, before being quickly replaced with a cool, calm look. |
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He could not manage the soft tone of a human voice or juggle the stress on certain vowels and words, and on those he could it always came out angered sounding. |
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I must say, it was the sharp ring of truth which angered me so. |
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The union is so angered by the appraisal system, which it says has unfairly downgraded many workers, that it is taking High Court action against the Government. |
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But the decision to order staff to down tools has angered First Great Western, which runs services through Swindon to and from London Paddington and South Wales. |
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Angered at this, he walked out vowing not to have anything to do with her thereafter. |
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Angered by the show of force, workers hurled stones, iron rods and machine parts. |
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Reports that the Bishop of Margus had crossed into Hun lands and desecrated royal graves further angered the Hun kings. |
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Like Cortez, Columbus angered the Spanish royalty through subjugating and enslaving the native people. |
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An official proposed that Kublai should abdicate in favor of Zhenjin in 1285, a suggestion that angered Kublai, who refused to see Zhenjin. |
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French financial and religious policies so angered the Maltese that they rebelled, forcing the French to depart. |
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However one day the shark swam into the river estuary to hunt, this angered the crocodile, who declared it his territory. |
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The Larkhall potter was Crucible king in 2006 but five years on is still angered some critics labelled him the worst world champion ever. |
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Hoffman's freehanded approach to the law in silencing the defendants had angered many, and would later be overruled by a higher court. |
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And Master Lynch bade him have a care to flout and witwanton as the god self was angered for his hellprate and paganry. |
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The United States, in particular, was angered at Japan and sought to support China. |
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Like other mustelids, the polecat is usually a silent animal, though it will growl fiercely when angered, and squeak when distressed. |
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This has angered the Indigenous Peoples of Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh, collectively known as the Jumma. |
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The Brandeis family held abolitionist beliefs that angered their Louisville neighbors. |
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His speech angered several leading politicians, Carson repudiated it and Derby assured Haig of his backing. |
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This greatly angered Frederick, who ordered all copies of the document burned. |
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Henry VIII had also opened old wounds by claiming to be the overlord of Scotland, which angered the Scots and their King. |
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Many Liberals were also angered at MacDonald's pursuit of a trade agreement with the USSR, although Asquith rather less so. |
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Rudd was also unable to win support for a controversial mining tax, which had angered miners. |
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The British negotiations with an illegal organization angered the Irish government. |
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He angered British farmers by refusing to reinstitute the Corn Laws in response to poor harvests and cheap imported grain. |
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While it's tempting to send off an email in response to something that has angered or disappointed you, resist the urge. |
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The play makes much of this image, depicting Swetnam muzzled by a group of angered women in a carnivalesque episode redolent of a skimmington. |
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Hatton later claimed he was angered by the referee, which caused him to lose his calm and contributed to his downfall. |
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O'Rourke felt obliged to inform Mason and Gilmour, which angered Waters, who wanted to dismiss him as the band's manager. |
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A widespread sentiment that this decision was taken by the European Union long ago has often been portrayed via angered letters from Cheshire residents to local papers. |
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The emperor did not wish to execute his uncle at the start, but later events angered the emperor so much that Zhu Gaoxu was executed through fire torture. |
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Cromwell was so angered by this that on 20 April 1653, supported by about forty musketeers, he cleared the chamber and dissolved the Parliament by force. |
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I have been a lifetime resident in my beloved Springfield and am angered at the way my city was described by these snoots you interviewed for your story. |
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Angered by the carnage of World War I, Pound lost faith in England and blamed the war on usury and international capitalism. |
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Maximinus was in command of Legio IV Italica, composed of recruits from Pannonia, who were angered by Alexander's payments to the Alemanni and his avoidance of war. |
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Angered by the audience's laughter, he smashed the instrument on the stage, then picked up another guitar and continued the show. |
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Scottish and Irish officials were angered that the Welsh clubs had apparently consented to Powergen Cup fixtures on the same weekend as Celtic League matches. |
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This angered Hulagu, and, consistent with Mongol strategy of discouraging resistance, he besieged Baghdad, sacked the city and massacred many of the inhabitants. |
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The king was angered when George, who disliked Newcastle, verbally insulted the duke at the christening, which the duke misunderstood as a challenge to a duel. |
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Nonconformists were angered by the Education Act 1902, which integrated denominational schools into the state system and provided for their support from taxes. |
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And something angered Tamara in the way the Prince assisted in all this, out-commonplacing her friend in commonplaces with the suavest politeness. |
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Angered by his attitude, Margaret drew closer to the Albany faction and joined others in calling for his return from France. |
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Angered that his lowly vassal would make such a request, Prester John denied him in no uncertain terms. |
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In Parliament, William Pitt and Edmund Burke argued against the repeal, a betrayal that angered Priestley and his friends, who had expected the two men's support. |
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It was believed that this goddess was both evil and kind and had the ability to inflict victims when angered, as well as calm the fevers of the already afflicted. |
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The conflict started after Walker criticized Graham and his colleagues in the newspapers, which angered and prompted Graham to challenge Walker to a duel. |
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Relations with Labour soon became very tense, with Liberal MPs increasingly angered at having to support a Labour Government which treated them which such open hostility. |
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Having ruled himself out of the race when the news of Macmillan's illness broke, Home angered at least two of his cabinet colleagues by changing his mind. |
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The Duchess of Marlborough was angered when Abigail moved into rooms at Kensington Palace that Sarah considered her own, though she rarely if ever used them. |
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Simao's pirating activities greatly angered both the Chinese people and the court, which led Ming officials to order the eviction of the Tunmen Portuguese. |
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The British were increasingly angered by Napoleon's reordering of the international system in Western Europe, especially in Switzerland, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands. |
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Angered by what he considered a breach of law, Caesar prepared for war. |
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Angered by the allegations, former president Ramiro de Leon Carpio resigned his seat in Congress and his membership in the FRG to protest the secret accounts. |
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Angered by their crime and their calamity, I drafted Execution Poems in two weeks And Gaspereau Press sentenced it As a big, black book, a folio, two-feet long, One-foot wide. |
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