With respect to this dispensing of pain, it is the sadist who enjoys inflicting it, and the masochist is someone who enjoys receiving pain. |
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They stood firm and beat him off, inflicting another 12,000 casualties on Frederick's army. |
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Cruiser attacks on scattered shipping, Mahan believed, were incapable of inflicting prohibitive losses on a large merchant marine. |
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He and Wazzock have decided to team up with the common goal of inflicting some misery on the troubled teenager. |
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How many parents cannot muster the determination to discipline their children because they cannot bear inflicting the suffering it will require? |
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He could easily outmaneuver the Russians and use tactics to cross the T twice, inflicting maximum damage on the slower Russian fleet. |
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There are too many critics who revel in slinging mud and inflicting verbal pain. |
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Her clear eyes gazed lovelessly at me as I stood still, my own eyes burning into hers in hope of inflicting some emotional torture. |
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They get their kicks from destroying property, scaring people and inflicting pain. |
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Human beings over the ages have delighted in the most horrific and fiendish methods of inflicting extreme suffering, pain and mutilation. |
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He was sentenced for breaching his order and inflicting actual bodily harm on his barrister. |
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Those killed in military action are represented as inflicting their own deaths. |
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We were a fine guerilla force, inflicting a series of defeats on the party establishments. |
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We speak of inhuman cruelty when atrocities are so hard-heartedly cruel that we cannot conceive of ourselves as inflicting them. |
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Certainly no one would disagree that violent criminals should be prohibited from inflicting any sort of suffering. |
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His strike hit home, knocking a few of the armoured scales loose and inflicting a minor wound. |
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People are hurting and they are told relentlessly day in and day out that liberals from big cities are the ones inflicting the pain. |
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He became a redoubtable Commons performer, quite capable of inflicting bruises on the Prime Minister at question time. |
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The danger of these regimes is also in inflicting on multitudes the state of mass fear and, consequently, the state of psychological abnormality. |
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The very nature of judicial corporal punishment is that it involves one human being inflicting physical violence on another human being. |
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Our valiant forces were lying in wait for them, inflicting heavy losses on the covetous invaders. |
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We are pitted against each other, condemned to inflicting the greatest possible pain on each other, inexpiably. |
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Roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices are inflicting a heavy toll on American troops. |
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I would only be inflicting my germs all over you and giving you a bad chest. |
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Some contend that they don't meet the definition because they aren't directed at inflicting physical harm to people. |
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These include the letters, written in code, which are said to make clear she was in favour of inflicting pain on her enemies. |
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Fortunately, it came in at an oblique angle and skipped off his mail, ripping a huge tear in his poncho without inflicting any other damage. |
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Both the Greater Weever and the Lesser Weever are capable of inflicting a sharp and painful sting from the spiny rays of the first dorsal fin. |
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Teenage troublemakers who are causing upset in a corner of Morecambe are being warned against inflicting further misery on residents. |
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In fact some manufacturers are selling surplus or overstock through eBay to open other channels of revenue without inflicting channel conflict. |
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The pure, life-giving water was dying, crushed under the weight of more and more rubble falling in, inflicting endless wounds. |
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It was successful in inflicting a massive defeat on the most militant sections of the working class. |
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She was shouting something about tracking down the culprit, inflicting justice upon them. |
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Deirdre murmured, a tear tracing a path down her cheek, from sympathy, or from the bruises Alana was probably inflicting, he had no idea. |
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Avoid inflicting direct and indirect torture or hurt, such as we see in the treatment of street elephants or sport fishing. |
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If the question is how to achieve a just goal while inflicting minimal damage, especially to innocents, the answer may sometimes be military action. |
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She was nearly institutionalized in her mid-thirties by her older sister, a bitter twisted creature that felt pleasure only when inflicting pain on others. |
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Vandalism is the willful or premeditated inflicting of damage to an asset, which may include destruction or disfigurement. |
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As soon as it vanishes, key financial markets seize up, quickly inflicting material damage on fundamentally viable institutions. |
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This subterranean pest gnaws on young sugar beet roots, inflicting deep wounds that leave the plants vulnerable to disease. |
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And the damage that we are inflicting on biodiversity will debilitate living organisms for millions of years. |
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I have read the Justice Department memos — by turns clinical about inflicting pain and oddly solicitous about diaper rash. |
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Where housing is oversupplied, prices will have to fall, inflicting losses on homeowners. |
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There is something wrong with a person who gets his or her jollies by inflicting pain on an animal or another human being. |
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They must be capable of inflicting unacceptable damage on an aggressor state even after it has carried out a first strike. |
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Careful drivers put wear and tear on their cars and their backs while driving at higher revs in a lower gear, thereby inflicting more noise and pollution on local residents. |
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We learn a lot about Sophie in that passage, about her rejection of her mother and about her tendency towards self-punishment and inflicting pain on herself. |
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She encircled the cultists in frost, inflicting the deep chills of hypothermia. |
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The humble mask becomes a means of inflicting death, reflecting the facelessness of the puppets that Richard directs. |
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The latter returned fire, inflicting some casualties on the guerrillas. |
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After years of polluting, processing and over-refining our food, we are suffering from adverse health problems and, worse still, we are inflicting them on our children. |
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Just 10 days later he was arrested yet again for inflicting grievous bodily harm. |
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Miss Probert and her brother admitted affray while her father admitted inflicting grievous bodily harm. |
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She cut him on his side, inflicting wounds up to seven inches long. |
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In addition to inflicting grave injustices on property owners, takings that transfer property to powerful private interests are not needed to rescue distressed urban areas. |
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Without their tireless efforts the Canadian epidemic would be inflicting far greater damage than it currently is. |
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The first bombs dropped in 1941 contained too much metal and not enough explosives, therefore inflicting little damage to the targets. |
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Downing Street hopes it will concentrate minds among the rebels, to instil in them the reality that inflicting defeat now would mean the end of Blair, not just this policy. |
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The implication is that she might even have assisted her husband inflicting his superficial wounds. |
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Alarmed, Kegui brandished a knife and, official accounts say, slashed at the intruders, inflicting injuries, then fled. |
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Section 20 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 creates the offence of unlawfully and maliciously wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm. |
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The Army wants a handheld directed-energy weapon that is capable of both inflicting pain or using lethal force. |
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The animals aren't badly treated and no one enjoys inflicting pain. |
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Firearms, after all, are inanimate objects, incapable of inflicting harm on their own initiative. |
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It is also memories like these that make it easier to write scenes of inflicting pain upon male perpetrators. |
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So far, neither America nor Europe has shown much disposition to bear the inevitable costs of inflicting pain on Russia. |
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In that memo, it was asserted that inflicting severe pain constituted torture only if the perpetrator knowingly acted for the express and sole purpose of causing agony. |
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Punishment for its own sake is always a valueless process, which corrects nothing and only serves to vent the pent-up rage of the person or people inflicting it. |
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Mortars in particular seemed indiscriminate in inflicting casualties. |
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Terrorism is a blind act of violence aimed at satisfying its own demands and inflicting suffering on those all around, and it clearly needs to be stopped. |
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You're going to have a hard time explaining that to the soldiers in the trenches who were inflicting casualties and taking casualties, with the stench of death all around them, for that period of time. |
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She stated that she would not hand it over until she was transferred back to TQ and would even go as far as inflicting self-harm or trashing her cell if her requests were not met. |
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The Electronic Media Council is, among other things, responsible for monitoring the application of the Act and inflicting penalties if it is not observed. |
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The man is not only turning out inferior merchandise, but is inflicting on himself a shoddy life, who scamps his work to the point where he lets its quality sink to the level below which his supervisors will not let it fall. |
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Moreover, such a spell is not inflicting one wound on but killing the few beast masters aboard the towers, letting monster out of control, ie. removed from the game! |
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It is idiotic to treat a self-inflicted illness by inflicting more of the same. Awkward things, marketsTo be fair, two rather more sophisticated arguments are put forward for energy-price controls. |
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David Moyes's first night as manager at Old Trafford last summer was one to forget, with Sevilla inflicting a 3-1 chasing that turned out to be a sign of things to come. |
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Labour came a distant third in Hallam in 2010, but are now seriously considering the chance of winning the seat and inflicting serious damage on Clegg. |
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The Security Council should avoid inflicting more damage to the credibility and authority of IAEA as well as its own credibility by persisting in further illegal and illogical engagement and actions pursued by few countries. |
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It may still have the same physical and chemical characteristics and be used for the same purposes, thereby possibly inflicting injury to the Community industry. |
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Terrorists choose violence rather than the ballot box, inflicting death and pain on innocent civilians, justifying their actions by flying the banner of religion, race or political sovereignty. |
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In that connection, States parties should ensure that any places of detention be free from any equipment liable to be used for inflicting torture or ill-treatment. |
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Although heavily outnumbered, the Romans decisively defeated the allied tribes, inflicting heavy losses on them. |
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In keeping with the Schlieffen Plan, the Germans withdrew slowly while inflicting severe losses upon the French. |
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Despite inflicting a tactical defeat on Greene's army, the casualties suffered by the British were such that they withdrew to Charleston. |
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Despite the treaty, Henry set about inflicting severe penalties on the barons who had stood against him during the invasion. |
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Despite inflicting heavy casualties, the Aztecs could not halt the Spanish advance. |
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Concerned about inflicting casualties on their own troops, many bombers delayed their attacks too long and failed to hit the beach defences. |
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Throughout those years of awful tension, the Middle Kingdom and the Anglo-French axis had sharpened their teeth, inflicting terrible bites on one another, and the Opium War had poisoned relations further. |
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The pirating of literary and artistic works is today viewed as a global scourge inflicting substantial damage on the entire phonographic and video recording industry. |
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Insp Douglas Lovelock, the marksman who shot her, stood trial in 1987 charged with inflicting unlawful and malicious grievous bodily harm and was acquitted. |
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According to the skill and level of the players, this handful of elite soldiers succeeds, more or less easily, in inflicting a crushing defeat on the Russian troops. |
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Two days ago, rockets fired by anonymous rocketeers, slammed into southern suburbs of Beirut inflicting damage. |
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The monsoon rains, which feed India's unirrigated farmland, have been fickle, inflicting drought on almost half of India's districts, followed by floods in some areas as the monsoon departed. |
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The threat of massive retaliation inflicting more death and revenge remains the primary defence against missile attacks from world nations or terrorist organizations. |
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Those who manage insurance companies should never forget that they have a duty to ensure that strong enough defences are in place to minimise the potential for inflicting lasting damage on the industry. |
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Now Calder, 23, has been locked up for four-and-a-half years after she admitted inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent. |
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The fact is the ruling class is inflicting a slash-and-burn agenda on ordinary working-class people. |
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Likewise, I found it particularly distasteful and very hard to watch the media coverage of a minority element at some of those demonstrations who were inflicting pain on themselves, especially young people. |
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Management-driven anti-takeover moves are successful in defeating most hostile takeover attempts but often provoke rancorous, prolonged litigations inflicting great damage on companies. |
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Some think we should forget and look to the future, that there's no point in inflicting another ordeal on ourselves by trying to bring back memories and pick over old wounds. |
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But if evil is not always the product of an intention to destroy, it is always the product of a failure of intent: it's the lack of an attempt to restrain oneself from inflicting what one knows will be great harm. |
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Undoubtedly it is to be understood, that inflicting deserved punishment on all evil doers, of right, belongs to God. |
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The authorities continued to investigate these allegations under the crime of genocide rather than, for example, under the crimes of assault or of inflicting grievous bodily harm. |
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He was opposed by Fascism, which preferred to avenge itself on the priests and the organized laity, thus inflicting on the pastor greater pain than if it had turned against his person. |
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The release of the photos, which are undated, come after a defector warned that the country is capable of inflicting cyber-attacks on a devastating scale. |
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Three-time champions Sao Paulo coasted through after inflicting another 2-0 defeat on Cruzeiro, the goals coming from Hernanes and Dagoberto, the duo who gave them victory by the same scoreline at the Mineirao last week. |
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Hughes admits inflicting grievous bodily harm on Mr Martin, who was born with a congenital heart defect. |
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In particular, the Chief Custody Officer shall ensure that a detained person at risk is located in a cell from which all means of inflicting self-harm have been removed. |
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Whether because they were piqued or just because they could, Hungary hit back five times, inflicting a 10-1 defeathatat remains the heaviest in World Cup history. |
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From Windsor to North Bay twisters were hopping, skipping and jumping across the province, randomly inflicting violence at one house but sparing the next. |
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Few, certainly, had expected the Tahitians, edged out 1-0 by New Caledonia in their group opener, to encounter any significant problems in inflicting defeat on a Tuvalu side thumped 16-0 by Fiji in the first round of matches. |
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She pulled at the pants, inflicting some painful cow bites on Carl's legs. |
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Arminius initially caught Germanicus' cavalry in a trap, inflicting minor casualties, but the Roman infantry reinforced the rout and checked them. |
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The courts became feared for their censorship of opposing religious views, and became unpopular among the propertied classes for inflicting degrading punishments on gentlemen. |
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If a compromise could not be found, the utux could make a judgment by granting a successful headhunt to the innocent party and inflicting damage on the other party. |
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Falkenhayn believed that a breakthrough might no longer be possible and instead focused on forcing a French defeat by inflicting massive casualties. |
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He was driven off, but not without inflicting heavy casualties. |
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Henry reformed the coinage in 1107, 1108 and in 1125, inflicting harsh corporal punishments to English coiners who had been found guilty of debasing the currency. |
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