At nesting time the parents become bold and pugnacious attacking crows, magpies, cuckoos and kestrels crossing their territory. |
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They are as pugnacious as stinkpot turtles and when threatened they quickly secrete a foul smelling liquid. |
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The males, said to be polygamists, are extraordinarily bold and pugnacious, whilst the females are quite pacific. |
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His elegant, often pugnacious, occasionally crudely offensive essays on composers are now available in a collection. |
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Bass being pugnacious and aggressive creatures by nature, the take is often a very violent affair. |
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What a way to go for the most pugnacious, aggressive Liberal minister I've seen in action. |
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The milquetoast types of New Labour never come off well when they try to act like self-styled pugnacious political heavyweights. |
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As is well known, the robin is pugnacious, fighting with its own kind and attacking other birds. |
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They absorbed a lot of pressure, their back four, hard-working and combative in face of opponents who were persistent and pugnacious. |
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The interviewer got nowhere with trying to manipulate or trip up the pugnacious trial lawyer turned politician. |
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According to my bird book, bulbuls are pugnacious, and are still used as contestants in bulbul fights. |
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He had been wise in his career choices, guided by his sprawling but close-knit family and his pugnacious agent. |
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Hayden, self-assured and pugnacious, insisted that the interrogations were carefully run and unassailably effective. |
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He had a walking stick and his whole manner was so pugnacious and focused. |
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They are hardy and long-lived but pugnacious toward other birds and have loud, squawky voices. |
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The prime minister grasped how damaging it would be to have this pugnacious woman floating around without a portfolio to keep her on-message. |
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Outgoing, alert and intelligent, they are neither fierce nor pugnacious, although they are not overflowing with affection for strangers. |
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Paul is presented by many as a pugnacious man who was well able to wield the sword of his words. |
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In East Timor, as in other Asia countries, it is necessary to be pugnacious and tough by smiling. |
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I do not know, but the new owner had to be very courageous and pugnacious to achieve his dream: reopen the distillery. |
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My congratulations and respect for this brave, open and somewhat pugnacious article. |
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Enclosed you will find the history of the company as well of young man Vassant, pugnacious, perfectionist and passionate about his career. |
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Habits: For such a small butterfly it can be very pugnacious, chasing off other butterflies from its territory. |
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With an editorial staff of its own, it takes a more pugnacious line than the print version, though without detracting from its in-depth coverage. |
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A catfight breaks out between restless, wilful Miss Braund and her pugnacious chaperone, Mrs Hammond, ending with a slap from the hostess, the hatchet-faced Mrs Rogers. |
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Joe Sutter is 93 now, silver-haired and moving a tad more slowly than he would like, but still pugnacious and sharp of tongue. |
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A former Colgate University lineman, Rooney was a pugnacious GI who had trouble keeping his lips zipped. |
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He's Jimmy Bly, a tow-headed, blue-eyed youngster with a protective, over-bearing, pugnacious older brother Demille who serves as his manager and mother hen. |
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He said that on the whole he got a better reception from Republicans, especially the pugnacious Sen. John McCain. |
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He is a pugnacious writer and speaker himself, well used to picking intellectual fights. |
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The Magnum opens up to 7.75 inches in length, with over four inches of that in a pugnacious handle stylistically befitting the business end of the knife. |
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And to those who wondered why the nation should heap up its wealth at the feet of such pugnacious vulgarians, the magazine gave the usual answer: Traders prospered because they delivered. |
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His clients are composed of individuals, professionals and small businesses who privilege a direct and lasting relationship with a pugnacious but pragmatic lawyer. |
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Those chosen must have first proven themselves worthy as not only master debaters but peerless, pugnacious political postulators as well. |
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The pugnacious Fulgence Bienvenüe continued his project, overcoming failures, unforeseen setbacks and catastrophes such as the 1903 fire at Couronnes, which killed 84 people. |
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Recha is an angry and pugnacious man, not given to moderating his tone. |
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A bit like Seinfeld's Elaine Benes and Sweet Dee in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia before her, Mindy Lahiri is the pugnacious antihero it is compelling, rather than just OK, to like. |
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That privilege imbued the mother, wife and older woman with a moral authority which they had to impose on the men. The latter were considered to be generally quick-tempered and pugnacious. |
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Dogs will range from sweet-tempered and patient animals. to pugnacious mutts that probably dream of such delicious adventures as severing human jugular veins. |
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Harold Pinter earned a reputation for being notoriously pugnacious, enigmatic, taciturn, terse, prickly, explosive and forbidding. |
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The more pugnacious among them have prepared for a showdown by skittering back and forth in the scrub with loaded machineguns. Texas's governor, George Bush, has so far been shrewdly silent. |
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It is also striking that the candidate country that comes in for the most criticism, often for trivial reasons, is Poland, in fact the freest and most pugnacious country at the Intergovernmental Conference. |
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In the face of bad news Churchill normally became even more pugnacious, always wanting to respond to defeat by going on the attack. |
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And the pugnacious Peretz has been all too happy to fire right back. |
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And typically, the pugnacious New Jerseyan refuses to back away. |
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He served as a pugnacious and dedicated leader of the opposition. |
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There's one pugnacious member on the committee who won't agree to anything. |
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Madeleina di Farja had described Ori, and Cutter had envisaged an angry, frantic, pugnacious boy eager to fight, excoriating his comrades for supposed quiescence. |
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As a journalist he showed immense talent and possibly genius, dispensing with the ornate poeticisms that then typified Italian newspapers, in favour of pugnacious invective. |
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For nearly 40 years, Mr. Solarin, an unpretentious and intensely pugnacious man, has been an intellectual guru for Nigeria's disenchanted and disfranchised. |
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