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Dictionary
appeasing
verb
Present participle of appease
Exact(60)
But Obama's opponents likened the gesture to appeasing the Nazis (see more below).
Who believes that we'd be appeasing the Saudis, who do more to foster Islamic fundamentalism than any other group in the world – if they didn't have oil?
In the diary I spelled out in full the stubborn opposition from former prime minister Julia Gillard, who had a member of her staff seemingly engaged full time in appeasing the Likud-aligned pro-Israel lobby.
But the current western strategy of bombing Isis on the one hand and appeasing Bashar al-Assad on the other is not only a losing strategy – it is making things worse.
Invoking Neville Chamberlain in Munich in 1938, they warn that the world is appeasing an aggressive and malign regime bent on a nuclear arsenal.
Lebanon's government will tread a fine line between appeasing the Shias and preventing a new conflict with Israel.Hamas, too, is in trouble.
A group calling itself the Society for the Consecration of Russia denounced the cardinal for "doing exactly what the devil wants" by appeasing the communists.The supreme, or most devilish, moment of Cardinal Casaroli's career came in 1988.
France, now terrified by German unification, sees it as a means of controlling its neighbour; Germany sees it as a way of appeasing its dormant demons; Italy sees it as a way of short-circuiting its hopeless political system; Spain sees it as a way of modernising and gaining respectability; and the smaller countries see it as a way of restraining the big ones.
The administration is more interested in logistical questions, such as how long it will take to build enough smart bombs to make an assault on Iraq possible, than in appeasing the more tremulous sort of Europeans, whom Mr Bush increasingly puts in the same mental box as academics and other lily-livered nitpickers.In this section Will tinkering bring the building down?
But by appeasing critics now they are inviting pressure to make more concessions.To reveal, but not to regulateStandard-setters should defuse the argument by making clear that their job is not to regulate banks but to force them to reveal information.
Mr Rudd's attempt to pose as business's new best friend while appeasing the union barons by reviving inflexible and outdated labour policies may prove a difficult trick to sustain as the election campaign heats up.Elsewhere, Mr Rudd is on firmer ground.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com