I would like to see them have that controlled determination, aggression and fight. |
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In the end, the film's moderately optimistic stance is tempered with a standard commentary on war and the nature of human aggression. |
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The trainer, unfazed by Dansk's apparent aggression, manages to persuade the animal to kneel, walks on its backside and performs pirouettes. |
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Research in social psychology suggests many of us respond with aggression, but not all of us. |
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His reign was untypically long and, like his father's, characterized by aggression beyond the kingdom's borders. |
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What comes next is the hard work of breaking the pattern of aggression, learning new conditioned responses to one's deepest values. |
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This synthetically manufactured fear is used to gain public sanction for further acts of aggression. |
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I have travelled to other Caribbean islands, and Bajans for example, do not have this type of aggression in them. |
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They drew brightly decorated swords from the sheaths, and fiercely struck the Assyrian warriors, those intent on aggression. |
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They are the touchline terrors whose aggression and foul language is matched only by the players on the pitch. |
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Such cowardly aggression will not be conclusively defeated there, or anywhere else. |
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Both bands have the ability to write heart melting ballads and also manage to write gritty anthems packed full of aggression. |
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Hamlet was given a couple of warriors, spearmen and bowmen to counter this latest example of English aggression. |
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On first sight it doesn't appear to be a technical circuit, it's all banzai, maximum attack and aggression over the kerbs. |
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The December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor was an unprovoked act of aggression by the Empire of Japan. |
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Researchers are at a loss to explain the link between maternal depression and childhood aggression. |
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As a temporary UN Security Council member, it has a rare opportunity to make a noisy stink about unprovoked aggression. |
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The tort threat and the threat of criminal prosecution after a crime has been committed are the most reliable inhibitors of criminal aggression. |
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The US will portray the resolution as a UN sanction for an unprovoked war of aggression. |
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Outbursts of uncontrolled rage and of teenage aggression, it seems, are becoming simply a part of the society we live in. |
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Then they were shown a series of words either neutral, meaningless or related to aggression. |
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Both batsmen timing the ball with precision, batted with charm and aggression. |
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But extra maternal androgens are associated with higher rates of aggression and mounting in both sexes, the study finds. |
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Hatred appears both as aggression towards others and as a striving for self-annihilation. |
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The recommendations do not extend to predatory aggression or what has been described as planned and self-controlled aggressive behavior. |
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Suppressed aggression toward others became self-directed aggression and self-punishment. |
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In fantasy, they get to feel the omnipotence, invulnerability, aggression and self-direction that real life makes so difficult. |
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The composed and rational side of their personality vanishes and is replaced by rage, aggression or whining. |
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But then, as Pater points out, unassertiveness itself can be a mode of aggression. |
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If the dog shows no aggression, reward it with a food tidbit or verbal praise. |
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Cub aggression, however, is not necessarily higher among offspring of high-ranking mothers, the study says. |
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Young pigs are kept in semi-darkness to minimise fighting and aggression caused through frustration due to their appalling conditions. |
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And if opponents aren't used to seeing such naked aggression, until they do, their immune response will be somewhat impaired. |
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Any situation that makes you anonymous and gives permission for aggression will bring out the beast in most people. |
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A mosh pit, like the blogosphere, is a zone of controlled aggression, a civil space, after a fashion. |
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Expecting the players to curb their aggression and competitiveness when trying to win a match is going too far. |
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For such a kind, gentle, and compassionate person, the upheaval of aggression has ceased. |
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He isn't an ideological pacifist, he just doesn't get the point of aggression and belligerence. |
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While real physical aggression is relatively rare, verbal aggression or belligerence is relatively common. |
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Some critics have blasted him for connecting violence at home to a past history of bloodshed and aggression abroad. |
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They seem a touchy and aggressive lot and none of them seem to realize that aggression just leads to counter-aggression. |
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Gentleness and compassion cannot coexist with aggression and hatred toward others. |
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Therefore, it appears likely that aggression is moderated by a variety of neuromodulators, including monoamines, neuropeptides and neurosteriods. |
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Verbal aggression, insulting and rude behaviour, disregard for the rights of others, petty thieving and shoddy work were the norms. |
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I know it must be some accident of history, or some poor, misguided attempt to contain Soviet aggression. |
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They concluded with a communique asserting a collective determination to resist aggression. |
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Typical nest behaviors, such as aggression and trophallaxis, were not observed among aggregating wasps. |
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I lost four friends in 18 months because of my truculence, my antagonism, my aggression and my mood swings. |
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The truculent aggression and stiff-necked unilateralism of both teams are already well known. |
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The fascist states left the League of Nations to get a free hand for their aggression. |
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Borderline personality disorder is characterized by mood instability and impulsive aggression. |
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United Nations members are pledged to collective security, i.e. to protecting any member nation from aggression at the hands of another. |
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Passivity, submissiveness and coyness can be dangerous, and may create an atmosphere of sexual aggression. |
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The ego's defence is to split off the aggression and to project it onto parental imagos who in turn threaten to destroy the child. |
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The functional significance of facultative sibling aggression is likely to depend on the magnitude of competitive asymmetry between siblings. |
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This would teach them about humility and the appreciation of life without getting involved with aggression and peer pressure. |
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The players were spurred on and in the remaining 16 minutes displayed tremendous aggression in their approach for a goal clincher. |
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What becomes evident next is that for them defense is synonymous with aggression. |
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It is the wars of aggression designed to expand imperial sway abroad that produce the fear that fuels his campaign. |
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Antipsychotic drugs such as chlorpromazine and haloperidol help to reduce aggression. |
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He possesses the aggression, running power and surety of touch to take men on and beat them. |
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Psychodynamic issues may center on suppression or repression of aggression relating to unmet emotional needs. |
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A group had gathered outside the only chipper still open and youths full of drink-fuelled aggression eyed one another. |
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Sometimes a stab is an overt piece of aggression visible for all to see, but there are more subtle ways of achieving the same aims. |
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In fact, politicians hide their inadequacies behind the interviewer's overt aggression. |
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The two have different management styles with one trying to override the other by verbal aggression. |
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The FDA has recently issued a warning that anti-depressants can cause stimulatory side-effects such as agitation, panic attacks and aggression. |
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Such reductionism is done purposefully to justify military aggression, he added. |
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Their defeats could be directly attributed to the lack of his fierce aggression and quiet, shrewd leadership. |
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Behavioral changes include sexual acting out, aggression, problems in school, regression, sleep disturbances, depression and eating disturbances. |
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Foxes selected for tameness are friendly, like domestic dogs, while foxes selected for aggression resist human contact. |
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They know the elusive swing voters scattered in a handful of key states want moderation, not aggression. |
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When she got carried away and started to show genuine anger and aggression, the Captain called her down. |
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The dividing line between aggression and a wrong decision, it seems, is thin. |
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They acted as willing collaborators in a concerted campaign of disinformation designed to justify a criminal war of aggression. |
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If you have lost enchantment, you are liable to divisiveness, intolerance, and aggression. |
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Using the doll, he demonstrated how viewing aggression causes emulation of that behavior, rather than catharsis. |
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The American media was equally emphatic and called the attack inexcusable aggression and state-sponsored terrorism. |
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Public displays of emotion, aggression and anxiety are an accepted form of behaviour. |
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Not for him the flared-nostril aggression of a manager-class cybercrat, or the wall-eyed stare of the technologist. |
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Dr. Young has found that taking tryptophan can affect human social behavior, decreasing aggression, irritability and quarrelsomeness. |
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For chivalry limits wars, gives quarter to enemies, controls aggression and brokers peace. |
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But those for whom enjoyment develops into aggression need to be weeded out before they can start to make a nuisance of themselves. |
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He demonstrated that even on dead pitches a degree of aggression can bring dividends. |
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History and theory show that the use of naked government aggression is not a moral or efficacious way of dealing with poverty. |
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I got away quick, which was down to the nerves, the aggression, the excitement and the adrenalin. |
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Up to two security guards will be on hand to protect doctors in case patients with a history of aggression turn violent. |
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A successful racing driver should be aggressive, but that aggression must be controlled by good judgement. |
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Just bear in mind the distinction between assertiveness and aggression if you have to jolly them along. |
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He is apparently quite passive, and puts up with all this verbal aggression from his wife. |
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Jubilant jumped-up managers all over the country embarked on a new aggression against the people who do the work. |
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To an anthropologist, lying in front of a bulldozer is an act of arrogant aggression. |
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If we abandon our ideals in the face of adversity and aggression, then those ideals were never really in our possession. |
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The point of the first war against Iraq was to deter such aggression wherever it might occur. |
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He's jealous and insecure, wants to hear from her everyday, whines and moans when she calls, pummelling her with classic passive aggression. |
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A third component of reactive aggression is affect, and specifically anger. |
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Are we naive enough to think Britain alone would have had the armament to deter aggression during the Cold War? |
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If we really understood either the physical or mental bases of the patient's aggression or other symptoms, we could untie this Gordian knot. |
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The longitudinal correlates of proactive and reactive aggression in children also seem to differ. |
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Proactive and reactive aggression were assessed when the boys were 13 years of age. |
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Hostile behaviors range from criticism or derogation to actual physical aggression such as pushing or hitting. |
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They do not have the right to use aggression against someone who is not aggressing against anyone else. |
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Community workers, nurses, medical and paramedical staff are also in danger of aggression and violence. |
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In contrast, we experience anger and aggression when the disappointment is perceived as being caused by an external source. |
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In human psychology, paranoid aggression is usually an indicator of nervous insecurity. |
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Harking back to college psych textbooks, you know he is nothing if not a case study in passive aggression. |
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This engenders despair that can develop into anger and aggression and eventually explode into violence. |
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So many of us strive to raise our children with good moral values including an aversion to violence and aggression. |
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It had to demonstrate that it operated to the very highest standards in its training of management of aggression and violence. |
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Residents worry about overt drug dealing bringing a culture of violence, aggression and intimidation. |
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But quite often those who cause trouble switch from a good mood to violence and aggression in an instant. |
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I didn't realise that people would attempt to goad us into aggression at regular intervals. |
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These programs, called Blueprints, have been shown to reduce adolescent violent crime, aggression, delinquency, and substance abuse. |
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Direct aggression can shade into behaviour which may be characterised as violent or aggressive incidents. |
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They have collaborated on research, most recently studying territoriality in dragonflies and aggression and foraging strategies in ghost crabs. |
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Georges Corm has shown how aggression and violence are founded on the prism of the communities. |
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You think it's only East of here that blanket propaganda is creating aggression and violence? |
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Keane has improved his aggression in the past few seasons, and I think that is one thing critics can not get at him for. |
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Because they are always accompanied by a public display of aggression and anger, which I find upsetting. |
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It pained me to make my lines in the shadow of anger and aggression I often felt in our household. |
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To reduce levels of aggression and violence in children's lives and build peaceful societies. |
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Its rhetoric is one of violent aggression against anyone seen as its enemies. |
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Acts of aggression, massacres and corruption legitimise foreign intervention. |
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The only significant expense involved is that of the military, to protect against foreign aggression. |
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It was a conspiracy to ensure a war of aggression and conquest would be fought. |
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To countenance such open advocacy and practice of aggression is to encourage the agents of anarchy. |
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The most obvious example of this is protection against foreign aggression and domination. |
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The logic of imperialist conquest means that the next war of aggression is already well beyond the planning stage. |
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The Norman dynasty is famous for its martial accomplishment, its aggression and, of course, its conquests. |
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A foreign occupation is an instance of the aggression of a state against civilians of another country. |
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They are a legitimate use of force insofar as they are used in defense and retaliation against foreign aggression. |
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Are wars of aggression, wars for the conquest of colonies, then, just big business? |
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The country demands that people should work hard to make it prosperous and defend it at the time of aggression from the foreign forces. |
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The only tense moments were provoked by police over-reaction and aggression. |
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Politicians and military planners argued aerial offense was the most effective against foreign aggression or invasion. |
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The wall was built by the Qin dynasty to deter foreign aggression from the north. |
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They were examples of absolute aggression, unequalled in surprise or impact since the Second World War. |
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The goal, clearly, was to lay a trap for a war of aggression and conquest, not to negotiate for peace and security through disarmament. |
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Intervention in domestic politics often cements dictators in place by uniting the people against what they see as foreign aggression. |
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However, the raid was widely regarded as the first act of aggression in the war of independence in that part of the country. |
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The fight raged on with Barry maintaining the upper hand with long left hooks and sheer aggression. |
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We had prepared very well all week showing aggression and determination yet on the day capitulated so easily in the second half. |
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Playing with enthusiasm and aggression, they were consistently first to the ball. |
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Gattuso's energy and aggression has been a feature for Milan and for Italy for the last couple of seasons. |
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The player is valued by his ability to play with skill, courage, commitment, genius, flair, strength and legitimate aggression. |
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Yet none of that bothered Dixon as much as the inability of his men to contest possession with a proper measure of confidence and aggression. |
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Butcher was prepared to take chances as he took on the bowlers but played with sense, aggression and confidence. |
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In Australia he had been overwhelmed by the moment and by the sheer aggression of Agassi's shot making. |
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Giancarlo will provide us with a very competitive blend of aggression, consistency and hard work. |
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Pavee readjusted their defense play and switched the aggression towards a determined goal hunt. |
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The home pack was soon in trouble, feeling the full weight of Otley's controlled aggression from the first scrum. |
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They worked very hard and played with great skill, aggression and confidence. |
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While aggression is a common virtue among champion pace predators, Walsh was adept at putting a lid on his temper. |
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German aggression against Poland, the USSR, France, and Britain caused him to link the survival of democracy with preserving religious liberty. |
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This gem is uncut but he has the aggression, energy and, most of all, the pass to fill the gap Matt Dawson is currently plugging. |
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We played at a higher tempo than of late and we showed the aggression and the determination we have been lacking in recent games. |
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They played with confidence, aggression, threw the ball about well and looked like a team who believed in themselves. |
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He invests his character's single-minded quest for meaning with a mixture of childlike earnestness and unpredictable aggression. |
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Gain an understanding of the aggressor's body language, and the rituals of aggression and deception that he will use against you. |
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In the case of international aggression this must be the aggressor as well as victims of aggression. |
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Babylon's aggression is portrayed as a hot wind that will blow across Judah, rendering fruitful land barren and laying waste to cities. |
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Greg skates well, doing kickflips, tailslides and the like, all smooth with aggression. |
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The second period degenerated to bad tempered aggression with a referee reluctant to impose adequate discipline. |
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Some will say that unlike his feistier brother, he lacks the same killer instinct and aggression to make it to the very highest echelons. |
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Not this time she thought with renewed aggression and fire burning within her bright mahogany eyes. |
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In the present study, we investigated patterns of aggression and nest mate recognition in the wood ant, Formica paralugubris. |
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We are being cudgeled into agreeing to wars of aggression, to make first use of nuclear weapons and to put weapons in outer space. |
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The Navy maintains, trains and equips combat-ready naval forces capable of winning wars, deterring aggression and securing freedom of the seas. |
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One of these is the unusually high level of aggression observed between Addo elephant bulls. |
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What clearly separated her from the others in the fray was her controlled aggression. |
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Negative communication styles by parents, parental rejection, or low parental support were also related to adolescent girls' aggression. |
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The modern teenager gets a bad press and is associated in many minds with yobbery, drunkenness and aggression. |
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They were also widely used in American football, a sport of controlled aggression. |
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But as Christmas approaches and everybody's temper gets frayed, it is the low-level aggression that wears staff down. |
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Ordinarily of course, self-directed aggression conflicts with the life instinct, especially it's self-preservative component, the animus. |
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When he did talk it was a gentle, whispered tone, no aggression or annoyance. |
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During the Cold War, NATO's strongest deterrent against Soviet aggression was the threat of nuclear retaliation. |
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It provides the legitimization of external sovereignty and some legal protection against aggression. |
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There is ample evidence to show that sexual aggression is a serious problem in heterosexual relationships. |
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We certainly do not need another front man for imperialist aggression around the world and a police state at home. |
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The result has been an act of imperialist aggression without precedent since the Second World War. |
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Rather than being a humanitarian intervention, the invasion is a brutal act of imperialist aggression. |
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We suggest that self-effacing humor is founded on the premise of aggression. |
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Instead, the correlates and outcomes of peer rejection were assessed without controlling for aggression. |
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The author's clinical experience and studies with a concentration in victimology place her squarely on the side of these victims of aggression. |
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Zoologists have known for over a hundred years that most animal fights involve ritualized aggression rather than injurious physical contact. |
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The law of Nuremberg stated simply, that it is not legal to launch a war of aggression against a passive, non-belligerent country. |
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In his work, formal intransigence was soon transformed into outright aggression. |
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It is there that the victim unleashes his entire arsenal of aggression, which has been stored up for just this occasion. |
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A police crackdown on town centre violence has led to thugs unleashing their aggression in the home, says a refuge worker. |
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Researchers have found that Conservatives typically are dogmatic, intolerant of ambiguity with beliefs rooted in fear and aggression. |
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He insists that while assertive management is needed, there is no place for aggression or bullying. |
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The forms and imagery of these sculptures refer to assertiveness and aggression. |
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Zulu warriors rushed into battle after ingesting a complex concoction of roots and fungus that dulled pain and amplified aggression. |
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Their attackers would grace any side in the world, but they will miss Stam's aggression. |
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That research, involving vervet monkeys, linked abnormal serotonin activity to poor impulse control and aggression in the monkeys. |
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The Australians looked disorientated at the aggression directed towards them. |
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We can only assume that fashionable aggression and machismo deter more women from having their say on political issues. |
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Americans seem aware that overt demonstrations of their love for their country can be interpreted as aggression. |
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Across the water were four immature eagles soaring, swooping, and suffering the aggression of what we believe was a Merlin. |
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The authors suggest that aggression by narcissists is an interpersonally meaningful and specific response to an ego threat. |
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Its hidden aggression avalanches the player, so he has to use his best skill and aptitude. |
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Depicting a story of war, aggression and greed, he takes a sardonic look at the reality of this entire production. |
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He plays a single parent thief whose diplomatic skills take the form of naked and, at times, plain stupid aggression. |
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We know also that in animals the male hormone, testosterone, is related to dominance and aggression. |
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Wars of aggression were only one of the subcategories of the broad category of crimes against peace. |
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The masterpiece of aggression, though slightly pixilated since it wasn't cable or satellite. |
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Such cases of female competition and aggression have been noted in many birds and other vertebrates. |
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Heh is surely ahead of the pack on his sophomore disc, thanks to his gravelly aggression and trippy aesthetic. |
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It's too bad that basketball has become such a contact sport that players are rewarded for being pumped up on steroids or resorting to playground style aggression. |
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His hands outstretched, shoulders in submission, there was no shouting, no expletives, no aggression at all. |
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We ought to seek Chinese cooperation in a response to this North Korean act of aggression. |
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If this is to be achieved, man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. |
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It will be a tough task and will likely prompt yet more Russian aggression or subversion. |
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They pushed their way past the barricade and found Zimmerman, who appeared by that point to have shed his aggression. |
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Symptoms during the early stages include detachment and aggression as well as insomnia, bed-wetting, and nightmares. |
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When the latest Russian aggression ends, Ukraine will still be a borderland caught between East and West. |
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Giving in to the demands of such a leader will, without question, invite greater aggression and brutality. |
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On the centenary of World War I, Europe's suddenly facing a crisis of Russian aggression. |
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The abolition of small courtesies leads inevitably to grosser aggression. |
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It's time that he was called to account for his acts of aggression. |
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But when the chips are down, Douglas has no doubt that things will be different, citing the controlled aggression displayed last year as evidence. |
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Pharmacological experiments in rodents have demonstrated a role for vasopressin systems in learning and memory, aggression, and affiliative behaviors. |
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Another component of reactive aggression is physiological response. |
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Occasionally, we may have to lend practical support for keeping the peace and protecting life and liberty in the face of internal and external aggression. |
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Assault varies from verbal to full-blown aggression and violence. |
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Furthermore there is the issue of his aggression and hostile behaviour. |
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We all have feelings of anger and aggression, and so does your child. |
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He or she may have problems controlling anger and aggression. |
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If we want to discourage violence and aggression in our country, we need to look at its causes and I doubt that all this anger stemmed from a few lousy films! |
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But violent aggression isn't the only emotion Kimbo acts out in the drama. |
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He's very skilful, he has the build, the aggression and determination. |
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What Pons lacked in brilliance, he made up for in aggression and energy. |
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Instead they countered the Indian bowlers mixing caution with aggression. |
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The agonistic behavior of many group-living animals, such as wintering passerines, ranges from overt aggression to more or less ritualized threat displays. |
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How could things in Ukraine have deteriorated to the point where Putin was now engaged in such a reckless act of aggression? |
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Mentally, he is full of aggression, thrust, directness, essentially active, not passive. |
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Yet that should not stop NATO from using its resources to dissuade further Russian aggression, Volker said. |
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I also think this fear and tension is helping to bring up a normally only latent or dormant aggression and anger that's always been around in our culture. |
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The combination of impulsive sensation-seeking and aggression was also related to antisocial personality disorder among male prisoners and to level of cocaine abuse. |
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And we refuse to appease the aggression and brutality of evil men. |
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The invasion of Crimea, however, shows that the Putin has chosen to forestall change with the help of foreign aggression. |
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Further longitudinal research is clearly needed to clarify the potential role of early proactive aggression in the prediction of subsequent partner violence. |
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Pit bulls, he says, are hard-wired for aggression and generally do not make safe pets. |
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Everything from videogames to heavy metal music has been blamed for aggression in teens. |
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They not only hoisted Russian flags, but reportedly beat Ukrainians who expressed indignation at Russian aggression in Crimea. |
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There was no more aggression, and I even heard one of the men, in poor English, say soothingly that we were safe. |
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No excuses, no backward steps, just aggression and dynamism and a lot of honesty, qualities that have finally given him a secure hold on Ireland's No.1 jersey. |
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But to be clear, masculine aggression has always typified and justified Republican foreign policy. |
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Watching it, it's got all the fun of a murder mystery musical, but the undercurrent of aggression never lets it slip into the realm of a wispy bagatelle. |
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Furthermore, one of the two females was observed singing late in the breeding season when territorial aggression and hence song should be decreasing. |
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Soviet leaders had already decried the rescue mission as an act of imperialist aggression. |
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Reality television has never been tame, but aggression, irrationality, and even violence is on the increase. |
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In general, this study's results suggest the woman's consent, or lack thereof, influenced the predictive utility of both sexual excitation and attraction to sexual aggression. |
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In the wake of any aggression, we are capable of giving a befitting reply. |
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Deterrence, a centerpiece of Cold War diplomacy, encompasses maintaining credible forces and showing the flag at appropriate locations to deter an enemy's aggression. |
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Both countries have supported the territorial integrity of Ukraine without giving Moscow a reason to justify more aggression. |
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Both Kerry and merkel threatened Russia with further economic sanctions if the country continues its military aggression. |
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Serotonin also regulates or modulates a variety of behaviors in many animal species, including aggression, feeding, learning, locomotion, sleep, and mood. |
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In fact, it is the hunters who tend to be violent as they become enraged at being denied the sick pleasure of killing wildlife and take out their aggression on the saboteurs. |
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We've ignored the trail of corporate blood money so often at the root of clandestine and overt aggression towards other nations, from war to assassinations. |
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Bopping them over the head with a James Bond drop-kick does not do much for anyone, other than stirring up more aggression in a potentially very aggressive situation. |
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There is indeed pent-up energy and aggression, but much in the show is also funny and sweet. |
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Spaying or neutering your rabbit improves litter-box habits, lessens chewing behaviour, decreases territorial aggression, and gives your rabbit a happier, longer life. |
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The main objective, the basic rationale of nuclear preemption is the use of force to deter and, if need be, to stop an act of large-scale non-nuclear aggression. |
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Still shackled, with his trousers in shreds and radiating off-kilter aggression, Phoenix immediately begins wilding out. |
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Tendentious jokes are a way of bypassing the barriers against the direct expression of both obscenity and aggression which civilization has set up. |
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Typically of Salmond he stood down not with the kind words of a retiree, but with the point-scoring aggression of an old warrior. |
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For example, individual male sticklebacks that are bolder toward predators are also better at obtaining breeding sites through territorial aggression. |
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But it has also been linked to a fiery temper, which may have helped give redheads the aggression they needed to survive in the harsh northern climates. |
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Scorched, soaked and scavenged, Robinson's paintings are a testimony to modern life as a chapter of accidents, where menace mingles with grief, and aggression with abjection. |
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Has the field of family therapy overgeneralized Bateson's theory by using it to explain all manner of human interactions beyond reciprocal aggression? |
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He left, having accomplished what I later realised was a retrospective charm offensive, aimed at persuading me that his show of aggression was an aberration. |
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While this correlation between domestic dictatorship and foreign aggression has a superficial plausibility, it is simply not true on the factual, historical record. |
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We made a few sweeps around the area to make sure when we dropped the smoke, no South Korean fishing vessel would see our action as a sign of aggression. |
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Students of all ages will sometimes engage in behavior that includes disrespect for authority, hyperactivity and inattention, lack of self-control, and sometimes aggression. |
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That doesn't say it all, but it's a message worth sending to the people most directly responsible for perpetrating this despicable act of aggression. |
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That is why, when peacekeepers are deployed to enforce the cease-fire, they are usually viewed by the party that has lost most in the conflict as colluders in aggression. |
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From an evolutionary perspective, aggression is a response to a potential threat or provocation across a variety of species and seems to be an inborn response tendency. |
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Hughes has worked hard on curbing his fiery nature, reining in his fanatical work-rate in the gym and getting him to control and direct his natural aggression. |
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According to these models, aggression is associated with maladaptive patterns of encoding, interpretation, and retrieval of interpersonally relevant information. |
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The only way to prevent aggression is to counter it before it acts. |
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He waged a war of aggression that contravened international law. |
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As he sees it, the aggression of tabloid journalism discourages potential candidates, who are fearful of the requisite intrusion into their private lives. |
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There are no ballads or melodies, just raw, heavy in-your-face aggression. |
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For example it may be that heroin addicts choose heroin because it counteracts the rage and aggression they feel, while cocaine may be used to medicate against depression. |
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For management officials and industrial arbitrators, male aggression towards foremen and supervisors was far more serious than such behavior toward fellow workers. |
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The atmosphere is of barely restrained aggression and frustration. |
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And his natural aggression provided David Dunn with the cover necessary to enable the 22-year-old to showcase his talents on the big stage he has always craved. |
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It's a sign of the changing attitude of the players that this season they have been far more disciplined in dispatching opponents, even in the face of overzealous aggression. |
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I'm positive the F1 veteran will progress quite nicely throughout the month and will qualify easily, but will he be able to dial up the aggression if necessary? |
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Sometimes a pet growls or exhibits unfounded aggression during this time. |
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Their construction of a nationalist philosophical system that eventually served as an apologia for Japan's aggression can be traced to such an experience of Eurocentricity. |
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Apart from condemning the U.S. and its allies as well as warning against their plans of further aggression, the documentary exhorts the people to boycott the U.S. products. |
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Liberalism appears blind to its own forms of self-assertion and aggression, and hence to its own part in the generation of this ghastly phenomenon. |
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Chemical rival recognition decreases aggression levels in male Iberian Wall Lizards, Podarcis hispanica. |
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Dogs in Coventry are put down for bad health but many fail a rehoming assessment due to aggression or are found to be banned. |
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Also Falx 2002 said that there are three main resource of aggression like coach, spectator and player. |
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Excess testosterone not only increases aggression, but it also has a reliable, dose-dependent effect on leg power and overall muscle strength. |
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Currently, Pakistan maintains a policy of credible minimum deterrence, calling its program vital nuclear deterrence against foreign aggression. |
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