Then, with at least some of the root-causers, their political sympathies and antipathies naturally incline them towards apologia. |
|
They have allowed their zeal for austerity to be tinged with regional antipathies. |
|
And no to every attempt, until 2006, to find a political solution to Ulster's age-old antipathies. |
|
To deepen this self-knowledge, we have discovered that our sympathies and our antipathies are the effects of the shadow sides within us. |
|
Conflict of competition: rivalries between people and groups over status, power and material advantages, mingled with personal antipathies. |
|
Moreover, in recent weeks contrasting national instincts and antipathies have come to the fore. |
|
Sympathies and antipathies in your relationships with others will be of major importance. |
|
They shun or approach one another according to the antipathies or sympathies of their sentiments, just as is the case among yourselves. |
|
Its settlement teaches people to accept differences, respect ideas contrary to their own, and overcome unconscious antipathies. |
|
So he lives his mother's anguishes, antipathies, needs, as well as her soothing thoughts and joys, as if the two beings were one. |
|
Men cannot live by going quickly from place to place, but the exchange of views and the dispersion of culture and thought tend to remove national and provincial antipathies. |
|
Travel tends to remove national and provincial antipathies. |
|
In many cases, these partnerships were a significant achievement given the combination of weakly expressed demand, historical antipathies between some actors and the fragmented nature of the market. |
|
Their activities between November 1655 and September 1656 had, however, reopened the wounds of the 1640s and deepened antipathies to the regime. |
|
Despite his violent antipathies, austerity, uncompromising reformism, and exalted concept of papal authority, Carafa was elected pope on May 23, 1555 through the influence of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese. |
|
Hurry had all the prejudices and antipathies of a white hunter, who generally regards the Indian as a sort of natural competitor, and not unfrequently as a natural enemy. |
|