Sentence examples for inimical of from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

One gets a particular sense of the sexual frustration at the root of so much violence in the world -- the naked prisoners chained with women's underwear covering their faces, lines of men wearing hoods forced to masturbate in a long row, men placed in position inimical of intercourse, Lynndie England holding a prisoner on a leash, walking him like a dog.

Similar(59)

The Internet has been subjected to the capital-accumulation process, which has a clear logic of its own, inimical to much of the democratic potential of digital communication".

Right now, the pressures of AAA games seem inimical to those of VR.

In an earlier age, his ambition and intelligence would have been sufficient to guarantee him high political office and public distinction, but he had the misfortune of being elected at a time when his views were both unfashionable and also inimical to those of the leadership of his party.

Factions within the city's musical establishment considered his identification with the progressive ideas of Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner inimical to the development of a distinctively Czech opera style.

Conservative leaders, according to Frank, care only about promoting the concerns of big business, which are inimical to those of the average Midwesterner.

The leader echoed its sister title, the Times, which last Thursday described the system of state-backed regulation as "inimical to freedom of expression" and said section 40 would create "perverse incentives" for the rich to intimidate the press.

Whether you see this as a carrot to lure publishers into an approved regulator or a stick to compel them to do so, it is a form of blackmail and, by extension, inimical to freedom of expression.

A profile of Chamber president and CEO Thomas J. Donahue in the current issue of Washington Monthly notes that while 96percentt of the Chamber's membership is small businesses with fewer than 100 employees, "it is also beholden to a cadre of multinationals whose interests are often inimical to those of small business.

Warnings, originally not about being "offended," narrowly defined and a reflection of compassion, are not in-and-of themselves inimical to this idea or academic freedom.

DEFECTORS 63. (S/NF) For the purpose of this telegram, the term "defector" refers to a person of any nationality (usually from a country whose interests are hostile or inimical to those of the United States) who has escaped from the control of their home country and is of special interest to the U.S. Government.

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