All the important rivalries in Europe both antedated the ideological divide and crossed its boundaries. |
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The Calgary Flames-Edmonton Oiler rivalries in the 1980s produced some classic gamesmanship. |
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Then of course, there were the school rivalries, when everything heated up an extra notch and bodies were put on the line. |
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All across the country, there are pre-existing rivalries between teams and cities that are ripe for promotional exploitation. |
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These problems have resulted in part from interservice rivalries and interoperability problems. |
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For the past 12 weeks, the television world has been treated to the novel concept of inter-faith rivalries beamed into their homes nightly. |
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Ilchev said referendums were inappropriate to the country's political environment, characterised as it is by rivalries and factionalism. |
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Two of the biggest carmakers are putting their rivalries aside and teaming up. |
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But underlying all this, there are tensions born of age-old rivalries, long unsettled land disputes and of arguments long forgotten. |
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Some even volunteered information about corruption, politics and inter-ministerial rivalries. |
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Tribal rivalries meant that every male Mongol was brought up to be able to fight and hunting expeditions formed the ideal training ground. |
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Speaking of Ohio State, college rivalries are getting under the skin of some NFL college and regional scouts. |
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Others have been nothing short of bloodbaths, where age-old rivalries and enmities were brought out to be settled once and for all! |
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He describes the thanklessness and insecurity of the job, and the rivalries inside and outside newspaper offices. |
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The over-arching framework of bipolarity seemed to render other struggles and rivalries nothing more than local manifestations of the Cold War. |
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No longer are rivalries between town and gown manifested in destruction, riot and murder. |
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This definition comes from someone who has lived among the rivalries of Northwest Coast tribal groups? |
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The government had always kept potential ethnic rivalries down with an iron hand. |
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Whether it was Magic Johnson trash-talking with Larry Bird or Knicks fans giving Reggie Miller the bird, the NBA has seen some super rivalries. |
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With the contest now under way, this DVD is an opportunity to swot up on one of cricket's and sport's most ancient rivalries. |
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He presides over an administration that is riven with ethnic, religious and regional rivalries. |
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Sibling rivalries can cast a shadow on adulthood relationships within families, marriages, even work. |
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With program rivalries, people are said to be more captious and aware of the shows they are watching. |
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Hence the exercise of the ruler's authority could be decisive in determining the outcome of local rivalries. |
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Crew line-ups have remained identical to last year and strong rivalries continue. |
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The distribution and control of offices, such as countships, abbacies, and bishoprics, became the main foci of the political rivalries. |
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The carve-up in the 1880s and 1890s of Africa and much of Asia by the great powers stimulated national rivalries and promoted racism. |
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Street fights, and other contests sometimes developed between workers in guilds that maintained traditional rivalries. |
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All this was good for morale, but rivalries could have a damaging effect on operational efficiency. |
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There certainly have been conflicts and rivalries in the group, but basically we are an amazingly harmonious bunch. |
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But with old rivalries running deep and half the country still carved into de facto fiefdoms, it isn't easy to divvy up power, government posts and mineral spoils. |
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The communities that play can display fierce and irrational rivalries. |
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America's disadvantages included few trained generals or troops, a weak central authority unable to provide finance, intercolonial rivalries, and lack of sea power. |
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Various theories propose that it was the product of paranoid madness, the involuted working of kinship-based rivalries, or a reasoned, rational punishment of treachery. |
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As this prospect has dimmed, however, fears have grown that as trade rivalries step up the transnationals will see their British operations as prime areas for cutbacks. |
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The game of betrayals and rivalries among the sisters is the counterpoint to the elderly king's sadness, solitude and agedness. |
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Although three wrecked schools are now combined at South Plaquemines, rivalries persist at some level. |
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Somalis are no longer starving to death nor killing one another in clan rivalries. |
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Once freed of the dead hand of communism, old national and racial rivalries were likely to reassert themselves. |
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Beneath the veneer of landscapes, portraits and genre scenes, political rivalries roiled, and medals granted to entrants were contested hotly as matters of national pride. |
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Supporters, for all their rivalries and occasionally tribal nature, tend not to like it when they see their own being so badly mistreated. |
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Intracommunal tensions as well as secular-Islamic rivalries could destabilize the tortuous process of democracy building in Egypt. |
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There was a real esprit de corps in the various militia companies of the towns and parishes, which just begged to be developed through rivalries. |
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Local bodies too have been preyed upon by political rivalries and polarization. |
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Short of actual hostilities, it is an ingredient in the poisonous racial and religious rivalries that wrack so much of the world. |
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Dark secrets, old rivalries and hidden lies are revealed when a group of once-famous thespians reunite for their director's wake. |
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They have to put up with anything: floods, rivalries, alliances, parasites, and even cheetah attacks. |
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Often maintaining old world rivalries, Irish labourers lived in shantytowns along the canal and formed a close-knit working-class community. |
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For us to succeed, we need to put aside our petty squabbles and the interinstitutional rivalries. |
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Conflict of competition: rivalries between people and groups over status, power and material advantages, mingled with personal antipathies. |
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Kellogg is a typically insecure reporter, but his assignment enmeshes him in rivalries with more successful men. |
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Better to slug it out on the scoreboard than the battlefield, even if nationalist rivalries can erupt into hostilities. |
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Rangers have been cast adrift from their usual competitive environment, but old rivalries persist. |
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Buenos Aires made significant advances toward national leadership by taking advantage of the interprovincial rivalries. |
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There are also strong standing personal rivalries and jealousies amongst the gangsters. |
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Yet the high calling of diplomacy is to find antidotes to the rivalries that poison geopolitics. |
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One unfortunate consequence: the list has become a focus for interethnic and religious rivalries in Canada. |
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The libretto is a tangle of court intrigues, wars and love rivalries in which the Aztec hero, general Montezuma, plays a central role. |
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Thus do peaches and nectarines turn into issues involving debt mountains, military no-go zones and historic ethnic rivalries. |
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Jamaicans will hope that rivalries will be confined to the football field in future. |
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It has made successive use of various warlords, stoking the rivalries among them. |
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Life seldom imitates art, and the struggle to achieve votes for women was as fraught with internal factionalism and personal rivalries as any other political movement. |
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Over a third of Pakistanis now live in towns and cities, where tribal and rural rivalries are morphing into violent, urban warlordism. |
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Attempts to coordinate the region's cultural offerings have met with little success, for traditional intercity rivalries remain deeply entrenched. |
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First on court is the latest instalment in one of the rivalries that will shape these Games, with England playing Australia in the group stages. |
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In mediation practices going back hundreds of years, they have perfected conflict resolution techniques to negotiate rivalries and blood feuds. |
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You know as well as I that water will be as greatly coveted as oil in coming years, and that it will spark just as many rivalries. |
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This is true even where no rivalries were apparent while the founder was alive. |
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Capitalism had created a world market dominated by the imperialist powers and divided by their rivalries. |
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Torn by religious and political rivalries, this kingdom had fallen prey to the colonial ambitions of Germany and Great Britain. |
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In a 2003 report, Doctors without Borders talked of inter-state rivalries to control the region politically and exploit its natural resources. |
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These constitutional arguments also reflected underlying rivalries common in democratic politics. |
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History proves how readily Afghanistan can fall victim to regional rivalries and foreign invasion. |
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There are also some ethnic-driven rivalries between gangs in some pockets of the region, and marijuana grow rips or other drug rips. |
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Land, old tribal rivalries and arms proliferation are an explosive combination and a source of instability. |
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The answer is that in a changing political landscape it intersects with problems caused by deindustrialization, structural unemployment, and ethnic rivalries. |
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Now for the complications and awkwardness, to say nothing of elbows and gossip and rivalries and all that other stuff. |
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All of this is playing out against a backdrop of ferocious political rivalries and discord in the capital of Sanaa. |
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The world can no longer afford the blind suspicion, destructive rivalries and indifference to the legitimate fears of others that have brought it to this state. |
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Over time, old rivalries began to deepen, particularly over the spoils of corruption. |
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As India's most powerful political family roils with rivalries and betrayals, Nehru's great-grandson campaigns from a jail cell. |
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There has always been an edge to the relationship but it was never scented with sulphur or cordite or laced with the naked hostility that defines other rivalries. |
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There was always gossip about longtime rivalries and unforgiven grudges, but they were reluctant to air secrets which might tarnish their collective image. |
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He was released in 1999 under the Good Friday Agreement, only to be taken back to jail in August 2000 for allegedly stirring up rivalries among loyalists. |
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Football retained tenacious local loyalties, overlaid by denominational and social rivalries, mediated by the search for success and corresponding reward. |
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Powys withstood encroachments from England and Gwynedd throughout its existence, although the Welsh custom of partible inheritance caused rivalries among the ruling family. |
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Indulging in inexcusable rivalries can only have a negative impact. |
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And it would give blacks a leader whose near-mythical reputation had hoisted him above the rivalries and dogmas that afflict so many of his followers. |
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The provinces are remembered in regional public holidays and sporting rivalries. |
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Ms Mantel is a more subtle weaver of moods and references across time: from the pitiful treatment of discarded women to the rivalries, great and small, of office politics. Her subject matter is also commercially savvy. |
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I would still like to add a brief comment regarding the composition, namely that it would be regrettable if latent rivalries between political groups or specific components rise to the surface. |
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Barnstable and Falmouth hold the title of having one of the longest Thanksgiving football rivalries in the country. |
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They saw the Union as the means to move beyond the nationalism and rivalries that had led Europe to the brink of suicide during two world wars, ensnaring the entire world in its internal conflicts. |
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Boasts and rivalries are alive and well in class 7D, who voice their objection to the trammels of uniform and homework in a sweet, neat, melodic chorus. |
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Their effectiveness was limited by rivalries between different orders at Rome. |
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As for the Security Council, it is far too locked into the rivalries among its permanent members to actually have a positive incidence on international stability. |
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The desire to communicate by agreeing to share differences means the management of rivalries but also the development of relationships in which power relations do not dominate. |
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Such future rivalries will create an invitation to global conflict. |
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Add political, social and cultural rivalries into the mix, as well as a pair of stadiums a few hundred metres apart, and it is easy to understand why Serbia's two great juggernauts have long been the best of enemies. |
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These are culturally distinct peoples, tribes or clans in heterogenous societies who are locked in rivalries about the distribution of or access to state power. |
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In the pages of L'Equipe, the leading sports journal in France, Zidane's former team-mates have been laying into each other over the Blanc affair, while also complaining of old betrayals and ancient rivalries. |
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However, the princes of Europe were slow in responding to the call of the pope, largely due to their own national rivalries. |
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The rivalries between the Datus, Rajahs, Sultans, and Lakans eventually eased Spanish colonization. |
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The truth is that, in the past, international rivalries between trading blocs, and the national fiefdoms established by many privacy czars, have stood in the way of meaningful collaboration. |
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Bitter rivalries inside and between the three major parties worsened when Asquith was unable to forge the coalition into a harmonious team. |
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Militarism and imperialism of racial and cultural rivalries were little more than the amusements of his daily newspaper. |
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Miliband expounded on his views on foreign policy and warned that international rivalries and deteriorating relations between powerful countries such as the US and Russia were hampering international peace. |
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Fittingly for a country that is a cradle of drama and the birthplace of the great tragedians, Greece is also home to one of world football's most theatrical of rivalries. |
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These are further aggravated by land disputes and political rivalries, the most common causes of rido. |
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Right now there are no major rifts threatening to boil over, but should there be a weaker ruler in Tashkent, or a stronger one in Dushanbe, long-standing rivalries could become very problematic. |
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They have rivalries with Warrington, Leeds, Bradford, Halifax and Wakefield Trinity. |
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In September, gunmen killed 18 shoe factory employees in San Pedro Sula in a shooting blamed on gang rivalries. |
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The gods they place before us are human, all too human, replete with their small-mindedness and vulgarity, their rivalries, their courage and generosity, keeping company with mere mortals such as we. |
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In the wake of capitalist counterrevolution in the Soviet Union in 1991-1992, the bourgeoisie has renewed its attacks on the workers and poor of the world as imperialist rivalries have intensified. |
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The level of resourcing of emergency education programmes needs careful consideration in order to promote sustainability and avoid local rivalries. |
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The reigns of the later Yuan emperors were short and marked by intrigues and rivalries. |
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Beyond regional ambitions and rivalries between South Africa and Angola, what are the possibilities for cooperation between the two military powers of the region? |
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The situation of this real patchwork is further complicated by an agitated historical past and ancestral rivalries between tribes for the possession of land. |
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The following year, the Seljuq sultan died, and the sultanate was split by internal rivalries. |
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That in turn worsens cultural, ethnic and religious rivalries, turning them into terrible civil wars of national depredation in which the most execrable crimes against humanity are committed. |
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In the internecine rivalries of large corporations, whole departments may become expendable in the execution of one executive's power play. |
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The mental illness of Charles VI of France allowed his power to be exercised by royal princes whose rivalries caused deep divisions in France. |
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The two clubs contest the Steel City Derby, which is considered by many to be one of the most fierce football rivalries in English Football. |
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Unlike other rivalries, there is no political, geographical or religious split between Liverpool and Everton. |
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The club holds several rivalries, most notably with Liverpool, Manchester City and Leeds United, and more recently with Arsenal. |
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Manchester United has rivalries with Arsenal, Leeds United, Liverpool, and Manchester City, against whom they contest the Manchester derby. |
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Villa also enjoy less heated local rivalries with Wolverhampton Wanderers and Coventry City. |
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Other rivalries within London include those with Chelsea, Fulham and West Ham United. |
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Tottenham supporters have rivalries with several clubs, mainly within the London area. |
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They also share notable rivalries with fellow London clubs Chelsea and West Ham United. |
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At times it appears that vengeance and savagery will prevail, and that human beings will destroy themselves in bitter and futile rivalries while the earth that sustains us is in danger. |
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It is futile to give pep talks promoting quality while the organizational process militates against it by discouraging initiative and perpetuating internal rivalries. |
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And who better than DJ Taylor to undertake the Sisyphean labour of anatomising such a society in all its quiddities, vanities, rivalries and ambitions? |
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However, the fact is that the two main regions for potential expansion of civil nuclear power are also two geosystems riven by conflicts and rivalries, some of which span the two regions. |
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When the cast is earthbound, this enjoyable but trivial musical generally is, too, leaping back and forth across the line between spoofery and sincerity in depicting the rituals and rivalries of school life. |
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The current era of professional tennis is marked by many compelling rivalries on both the men's and women's Tours which are fuelled by rankings, family ties, national pride and even personality clashes. |
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A's gangbanging braggadocio, and he dismissed bi-coastal rap rivalries to collaborate with New York's hip-hop heavyweights Public Enemy. |
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So for once, for pity's sake, let us refrain from highlighting, or even exaggerating, the rivalries which exist within young, vulnerable African nations. |
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Second, poets read poetry in private or semiprivate gatherings, called mushāʿirah, which displayed hierarchies, status consciousness, and rivalries reminiscent of royal courts. |
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But the king was weak and unable to control the ensuing power struggles between Bahutu and Batutsi and feuds within the Batutsi clans, an extension of colonially created divisions and thus rivalries. |
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Among political and social factors, there are the fragility of democratic institutions, lack of respect for human rights, explosive nationalisms and ethnic rivalries, and conflicts that uproot and displace millions of people. |
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As powerful forces of nationalism resurface in Eastern Europe, within the Soviet Union, and in Germany, we are bound to see the reemergence of ancient ethnic rivalries and regional tensions. |
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Other rivalries Wrexham also have rivalries with Shrewsbury Town and Tranmere Rovers due to geographical proximity. |
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Boyish back-room rhythmic rivalries with political overtones have yielded to opulently escapist floor shows. |
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Long-standing rivalries resumed in Brazil, Costa Rica and Egypt over the weekend, while Argentina's fiercest enemies both slipped up against cross-province opposition. |
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When an owner dies without a succession plan and there is more than one family member that may end up at the top, all sorts of rivalries can bubble up. |
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The main goal was to curb the overenthusiastic spending on public works that served to channel ancient rivalries between neighboring cities. |
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But predictably Capulet and Montague rivalries fix the lovers' identities. |
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Instead of encouraging countries to step up and create new rivalries, new interest and new markets, the triumvirate are short-sightedly hoarding money. |
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It has longstanding rivalries with Australia and the United States. |
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Jonas was a well-travelled man who had worked on a variety of football-related projects from the fiery rivalries in Argentina to the humble surroundings of Staines Town. |
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This has led to the development of friendly national rivalries between the main sporting nations that have often defined their relations with each another. |
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Indeed, said rivalries preserved close ties by providing a constant in international relationships, even as the Empire transformed into the Commonwealth. |
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To this day, the contest is one of the fiercest rivalries in sport. |
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Additionally, Brazil has no contested territorial disputes with any of its neighbours and neither does it have rivalries, like Chile and Bolivia have with each other. |
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The establishment of the Aberdare School Board in 1871 brought about an extension of educational provision but also intensified religious rivalries. |
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The very existence of the league and its privileges and monopolies created economic and social tensions that often crept over into rivalries between league members. |
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With Khomeini's death, however, Iran also lost a strong-handed arbitrator, and factional rivalries behind the curtains soon spilled over into the public arena. |
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They provided safety, both for the Portuguese, and at times for the territories in which they were built, protecting against constant rivalries and piracy. |
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A survey by Football Fans Census in 2003 saw Swansea, Bristol City and Newport listed as Cardiff's main three rivalries, with Stoke City matching Newport in third. |
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Henry's family was divided by rivalries and violent hostilities, more so than many other royal families of the day, in particular the relatively cohesive French Capetians. |
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