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was mistrust
noun
Lack of trust or confidence.
Exact(15)
At first, there was mistrust on both sides.
The unmistakable theme of the hearings was mistrust of the government's ability to oversee nuclear safety.
Jordanian executives said there was mistrust in doing business with Israel despite a 1994 peace accord.
"There was mistrust from the get-go in this year's negotiations," said Henry Garrido, associate director of the district council.
Apart from the unpredictability of the science, there was mistrust that western-northern-driven technological solutions to climate change would be fair or equitable.
Today Limbert says that while there was mistrust on both sides, to his ears Asgharzadeh is trying to justify the unjustifiable.
Similar(45)
He was mistrusted and occasionally humiliated by many high-profile coaches, and won hardly anything.
As head of the Yugoslav Radical Union, a party of Serbs, Bosnian Muslims, and Slovenes, he was mistrusted by Croat leaders.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, when in opposition, was mistrusted by Brussels and Berlin.
"There's mistrust," he said.
What's engrained is mistrust.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com