The Company refuses to capitulate on its demands for four separate enterprise agreements to cover the different sections at Joy. |
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How many countries would capitulate to the overwhelming demands of the document? |
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Their intention is apparently to use the weather to force the region to capitulate to their demands for regime change. |
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An effort without ground action leaves the decision of when to capitulate with the enemy. |
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He also implied the Russian Government of Vladimir Putin should now capitulate to Chechen demands for independence. |
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And the Republicans, I guess, will be so shocked and awed that they will lay down their arms and capitulate. |
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The rigidity and adamancy to continue with the strike action until management appears to capitulate leads to a dead end. |
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Facing huge public pressure, one of the most arrogant of Europe's leaders is fixing to capitulate. |
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By then he and the BBC were refusing to capitulate as Mr Campbell unleashed a ferocious assault. |
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It fears that its voters, particularly the younger generation, will desert the party if it is seen to capitulate to a unionist agenda. |
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It would have been easy for York to totally capitulate but they showed great spirit to launch a determined fightback. |
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The action worked like a charm and the very next day the contractor phoned to capitulate. |
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Nowadays, white flags signify surrender: one side signals its desire to capitulate to the other by hoisting a piece of white cloth. |
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Then the federal government seemed to capitulate and then that disappeared in a later draft. |
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As he is walking out the door, the Japanese call him back, capitulate, and a happy medium is agreed on. |
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Today, they capitulate directly to the post-Francoist Spanish capitalist state. |
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The US Government was instrumental in forcing the British Government to capitulate in the face of that terrorist campaign. |
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Occasionally even the most psychotic patient, when confronted with a significant show of force, will capitulate. |
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That is why they continue to capitulate to and justify racism, because racial oppression is a fundamental aspect of French capitalist rule. |
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The Prussian army invaded Baden, defeated the rebels, and forced the last remnants of the German revolution to capitulate in the fortress of Rastatt on 23 July. |
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This alone had made it possible to seize ocean bases from which to launch the final attack and force her metropolitan Army to capitulate without striking a blow. |
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This is not to say, however, that faced with litigation it is always better to capitulate and agree to coexist. |
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He knew his best friend, Chief Taylor, would stand by him and that Stilts would have to capitulate. |
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Nor is the stubborn, shrewd prime minsiter known to capitulate easily, or to misread public sentiment. |
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Here, once again, the opulence of the city puts its citizens under enormous pressures to capitulate to a life style of wantonness and shameless disregard. |
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The first is that despite the accuracy and lethality of air-to-ground fire, the introduction of ground forces is still necessary to compel an enemy to capitulate. |
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To swear the sensory intermediaries or observation sentences into truthfulness then, one has to capitulate to sensationalism or phenomenalism and forget physicalism. |
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In all my born days I have never seen a West Indies side capitulate as often, as feebly or as carelessly as this one has done time and time again. |
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Douglas had one more special save to make as Spencer refused to capitulate, bustling his way into the box but it would not really have mattered as time ran out. |
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She had been asked if she would rather have 180,000 people in the coal industry on strike and out of work or would she capitulate and let the largest public sector union in the country rule the land. |
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The Dutch army was forced to capitulate on 15 May 1940, following the bombing of Rotterdam on 14 May and threatening to bomb other Dutch cities. |
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Rather than capitulate to unequal treatment, a furious Allen organized a nonviolent protest to register black congregants' disagreement with the policy. |
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Environmental destruction is often a deliberate war aim, intended as a weapon to debilitate economies, weaken civilian resistance and put increased pressure on government forces to capitulate. |
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If things carry on like this then, by the end of this summer, Syriza will either take Greece out of the euro or – however large its democratic mandate – it will be forced to chuck its electoral promises and capitulate. |
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Having joined Davis on the stump, it would now be exceedingly difficult for him to capitulate and allow the government to push the counter-terrorism bill through via the Parliament Act. |
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He refused to speculate on whether Greece would be forced to default on its debts, but said the government had contingency plans in the event that the worst-affected eurozone country did capitulate. |
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All too often, unfortunately, the receiver spouse is willing to capitulate, willing to give up any claim to child maintenance, to keep peace in the relationship. |
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So much so that people all over the world from the West Indies to Brussels and Strasbourg, some individuals have decided to fight back rather than capitulate. |
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As for the more affluent farmers, they had no choice but to capitulate their position to the nouveaux riches, the forest contractors, plant managers and merchants. |
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Quite frankly, I don't find the argument very convincing that simply because litigation is expensive, government should capitulate on an issue as fundamental as marriage. |
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Why would the average Serbian, who has bombs and cruise missiles raining down upon them nightly, want to capitulate to the third condition and see NATO troops being the ones supposedly keeping the peace? |
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This meant that even if Saddam sought to capitulate, it would not suffice. |
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Laurier knew that Minto desired to see Gowan knighted and calculated that if he added a Liberal appointment to counterbalance that of Gowan, Minto would capitulate. |
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Yet Deutsche Bahn AG is not yielding: politicians have had to capitulate. |
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The decision to capitulate to the Americans on this issue is going to have long-lasting negative effects for this and any future government that might want to oppose the U. S. during discussions on cultural issues. |
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We saw in the free trade agreement where it cost us a billion dollars to capitulate and now we see the trouble that we are having in the industry. |
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The elegant man looking for originality will simply capitulate when he sees these two perfect circles whose meeting point is enclosed by the straight lines of a transfer rectangle at 6 o'clock. |
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You realised a little too late that we were heading for a confrontation, and that this House intended to make you capitulate in order to reaffirm its authority vis-à-vis the Council and the Commission. |
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Following the advice of many people, among which the CEED in Paris and specialized lawyers, we had to capitulate to the evidence: a family life without the Jugendamt is not possible for foreigners in Germany. |
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The King was conciliatory towards Fox, after being forced to capitulate over his appointment. |
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Alexander I refused to capitulate, and the peace talks attempted by Napoleon failed. |
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The country still refuses to capitulate despite its weakening army and dwindling resources. |
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