Shakespeare's ambivalently comic treatment of power, sexuality, and repression belongs very much to the early years of the Jacobean period. |
|
Clifford looks forward ambivalently to the day when such concerns will not be his. |
|
Both were deeply but ambivalently bonded with their male sidekicks and, to both, women were simultaneously a lure and a threat. |
|
The first of these is aesthetic, the second political, but both inform her ambivalently negative attitudes towards still photography. |
|
Harry's relationship with his mother was classified as ambivalently attached. |
|
Thus, an ambivalently attached person and the ruminator may seek out help but focus on their emotional elements of their distress. |
|
This leaves the ruminator or ambivalently attached person feeling unheard and increases his or her distress. |
|
Love is ambivalently both an enduring ideal relationship and a struggle for mastery in which the male has the upper hand. |
|
Viewed positively or even ambivalently, one sees the search for the Absolute, a desire for living together, a sensitivity to group and social feeling, and of all that constitutes the human. |
|
The Constitution ambivalently guarantees women's rights in Afghanistan. |
|
The president himself talks ambivalently about his critics. |
|
But there is no doubt Merkel is calling the shots, however ambivalently. |
|