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IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY

  • Implacable hostility
  • Concept in UK child custody law

    In family law in the United Kingdom implacable hostility denotes the attitude shown by one parent to another in denying access to, or contact with, their

    Implacable hostility

    Implacable_hostility

  • John Bowes, 1st Baron Bowes
  • Anglo-Irish peer, politician and judge

    judge. He was noted for his great legal ability, but also for his implacable hostility to Roman Catholics. He was born in London, the second son of Thomas

    John Bowes, 1st Baron Bowes

    John Bowes, 1st Baron Bowes

    John_Bowes,_1st_Baron_Bowes

  • Communist International
  • International communist organization (1919–1943)

    revolutionary unity against Nazism, the Comintern maintained its "implacable hostility" and, in an appeal in May, denounced Social Democracy as the "ally

    Communist International

    Communist International

    Communist_International

  • Chu (state)
  • Chinese Zhou dynasty state (c.1030 BC – 223 BC)

    separate state. The attitude was captured in a Chinese expression about implacable hostility: "Though Chu has but three clans, Qin shall fall by Chu's hand" (楚雖三戶

    Chu (state)

    Chu (state)

    Chu_(state)

  • Child contact centre
  • present or where one of the parties involved in the dispute has an implacable hostility toward another. where this has been deemed necessary by a custody

    Child contact centre

    Child_contact_centre

  • Definitions of fascism
  • Theories about the phenomenon of fascism

    community. Fascist nationalism is reactionary in that it entails implacable hostility to socialism and feminism, for they are seen as prioritizing class

    Definitions of fascism

    Definitions of fascism

    Definitions_of_fascism

  • Auchtermuchty
  • Town in Fife, Scotland

    personal Brigadoon, a place of solemn courtesy to one's betters and implacable hostility to outsiders." Auchtermuchty is mentioned in a song from the album

    Auchtermuchty

    Auchtermuchty

    Auchtermuchty

  • Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds
  • British politician (1751–1799)

    argued that Leeds' only lasting achievement was to foster Jefferson's implacable hostility as President to the British government. Subsequently, Leeds took

    Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds

    Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds

    Francis_Osborne,_5th_Duke_of_Leeds

  • Manolo López López
  • Cuban anti-communist guerrilla (1943–1962)

    birthplace. During adolescence, he developed political views based on an implacable hostility toward Fidel Castro's government and a strong anti-communism. In

    Manolo López López

    Manolo López López

    Manolo_López_López

  • Angolan Wars
  • 1579–1683 series of wars

    would continue until 1662. Nzingas "nearly twenty-five years of implacable hostility dissolved after 1650 in a subservience that became the cornerstone

    Angolan Wars

    Angolan Wars

    Angolan_Wars

  • Third government of Segismundo Moret
  • in Maura declaring the liquidation of the Pact of El Pardo and "implacable hostility" to the Liberals in power. The Council of Ministers was structured

    Third government of Segismundo Moret

    Third government of Segismundo Moret

    Third_government_of_Segismundo_Moret

  • Fathers' rights movement in the United Kingdom
  • mother, who may be deemed irrelevant to the proceedings in cases of implacable hostility. Fathers 4 Justice (F4J) takes a proactive approach to generating

    Fathers' rights movement in the United Kingdom

    Fathers' rights movement in the United Kingdom

    Fathers'_rights_movement_in_the_United_Kingdom

  • Paranoid personality disorder
  • Personality disorder involving mistrust of others

    characterization of PPD are suspiciousness, restricted affectivity, and hostility. The ICD-11 classification of personality disorders has replaced the categorical

    Paranoid personality disorder

    Paranoid_personality_disorder

  • Siege of the Tower of London (1460)
  • 1460 battle in the English Wars of the Roses

    the King and was reappointed Protector. However, he had earned the implacable hostility of Henry's Queen, Margaret of Anjou, who suspected York of wishing

    Siege of the Tower of London (1460)

    Siege of the Tower of London (1460)

    Siege_of_the_Tower_of_London_(1460)

  • The Sailor's Return (film)
  • 1978 film by Jack Gold

    newcomer Shope Shodeinde), struggling under the dual challenges of implacable hostility from the outside and the unravelling of her marriage at home. ..

    The Sailor's Return (film)

    The_Sailor's_Return_(film)

  • The Green Book (IRA)
  • Irish Republican Army training and induction manual

    its foundation in 1916 has been one of sustained resistance and implacable hostility to the forces of imperialism, always keeping in the forefront of

    The Green Book (IRA)

    The_Green_Book_(IRA)

  • The Sultan of Morocco
  • 1845 painting by Eugène Delacroix

    the painting shows the Sultan as "'aloof and uninviting,'" with "'implacable hostility,'" and that the work as a whole was a triumphalist piece with imperialist

    The Sultan of Morocco

    The Sultan of Morocco

    The_Sultan_of_Morocco

  • Captain Jan
  • Book by Jan de Hertog

    head of a faithful crew - a very little struggling David facing the implacable hostility of the Kwel Goliath. He has the luck to save an American millionaire's

    Captain Jan

    Captain_Jan

  • Frederick Irwin
  • Irish soldier and administrator

    Colony from an enemy, who was doubly dangerous from his apparently implacable hostility and from his influence as an acknowledged Chief. The latter circumstance

    Frederick Irwin

    Frederick Irwin

    Frederick_Irwin

  • Ministry of Social Affairs, Health, Care and Consumer Protection
  • Government ministry of Austria

    In the decade leading up to the Anschluss and to World War II, implacable hostility between Social Democrats and Christian Conservatives had eroded civil

    Ministry of Social Affairs, Health, Care and Consumer Protection

    Ministry of Social Affairs, Health, Care and Consumer Protection

    Ministry_of_Social_Affairs,_Health,_Care_and_Consumer_Protection

  • Id, ego and superego
  • Psychological concepts by Sigmund Freud

    not identify with the father. Therefore, ‘their superego is never as implacable, as impersonal, as independent of its emotional origins as we demand of

    Id, ego and superego

    Id,_ego_and_superego

  • Midgegooroo
  • Aboriginal Australian executed without trial in 1833

    Colony from an enemy, who was doubly dangerous from his apparently implacable hostility and from his influence as an acknowledged Chief. The latter circumstance

    Midgegooroo

    Midgegooroo

  • The Satanic Verses
  • 1988 novel by Salman Rushdie

    it is perhaps for this reason that he underestimated the implacable nature of the hostility evoked by The Satanic Verses, even though a major theme of

    The Satanic Verses

    The_Satanic_Verses

  • 1910 Spanish general election
  • to Maura declaring the liquidation of the Pact of El Pardo and "implacable hostility" to the Liberals in power. Once in power, the Liberal Party saw itself

    1910 Spanish general election

    1910 Spanish general election

    1910_Spanish_general_election

  • Dalia Ziada
  • Egyptian writer

    The Future of Democratic Reform; Tharwa Foundation 2008 Translator, Implacable Adversaries: Arab Governments and The Internet; Arab Network for Human

    Dalia Ziada

    Dalia Ziada

    Dalia_Ziada

  • Frank Gallagher (author)
  • Irish journalist, author & Volunteer (1893-1962)

    published posthumously as The Anglo-Irish Treaty (1965). Gallagher's implacable hostility to the Anglo-Irish Treaty inevitably colours his analysis; but despite

    Frank Gallagher (author)

    Frank_Gallagher_(author)

  • Nabeel Rajab
  • Bahraini human rights activist (born 1964)

    information on Twitter) as an illustration of the Bahraini government's implacable hostility towards freedom of expression and Internet freedom. In 2012 Rajab's

    Nabeel Rajab

    Nabeel Rajab

    Nabeel_Rajab

  • Thomas Tomkinson
  • English writer (1631–1710)

    whole of humanity abject. Tomkinson also toned down Muggleton's implacable hostility to reason, accepting that reason had its uses in everyday life but

    Thomas Tomkinson

    Thomas_Tomkinson

  • François Lays
  • French opera singer (1758–1831)

    of Oreste that Lays sought to return to the stage. However, the implacable hostility of the audience prevented him from singing a single note and, after

    François Lays

    François Lays

    François_Lays

  • 1914 Spanish general election
  • liquidated following his fall from power in 1909, declaring an "implacable hostility" to the Liberals in power—equivalent to the official severance of

    1914 Spanish general election

    1914 Spanish general election

    1914_Spanish_general_election

  • Guelphs and Ghibellines
  • Rival political factions in medieval Italy

    Ranieri of Viterbo died, depriving pro-papal leadership in Italy of an implacable foe of Frederick. An army sent to invade the Kingdom of Sicily under the

    Guelphs and Ghibellines

    Guelphs and Ghibellines

    Guelphs_and_Ghibellines

  • Gai-Jin
  • 1993 historical novel by James Clavell

    fanatical "shishi". He gradually adopts the same position as Lord Yoshi, his implacable enemy: the only way to purge Japan of these revolting barbarians is to

    Gai-Jin

    Gai-Jin

  • Breath (novel)
  • 2008 novel by Tim Winton

    contrasts Winton to Hemingway, writing that in Winton "Land and sea are too implacable for such [ie Hemingway's] triumphalism, too capable of the sudden knock-out

    Breath (novel)

    Breath_(novel)

  • Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941
  • 2017 biography of Joseph Stalin by Stephen Kotkin

    Kotkin's reading, Stalin is not 'the supreme realist – patient, shrewd and implacable' – described by Henry Kissinger, or even the 'rational and level-headed'

    Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941

    Stalin:_Waiting_for_Hitler,_1929–1941

  • White Terror (Spain)
  • Assassinations and mass murders during the Spanish Civil War

    como único remedio para extirpar esos dos cánceres por termocauterio implacable"), while for Serrano Suñer, brother-in-law of Franco and Minister of the

    White Terror (Spain)

    White Terror (Spain)

    White_Terror_(Spain)

  • Marquis de Sade
  • French writer and nobleman (1740–1814)

    with Anne-Prospère, a liaison which turned Madame de Montreuil into his implacable enemy. He wrote to his mother-in-law from Italy, disclosing his location

    Marquis de Sade

    Marquis de Sade

    Marquis_de_Sade

  • Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford
  • English supporter of Charles I (1593–1641)

    become one of Wentworth's (who became Earl of Strafford in 1640) most implacable enemies. Wentworth made many enemies in Ireland, but none more dangerous

    Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford

    Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford

    Thomas_Wentworth,_1st_Earl_of_Strafford

  • Thomas More
  • English politician, author and philosopher (1478–1535)

    Sussex: Harvester Pr. ISBN 085527963X. "[More] [...] turned to waging implacable war on enemies of the Church whom he could crush without inhibition. [

    Thomas More

    Thomas More

    Thomas_More

  • Moshe Sharett
  • Prime Minister of Israel from 1954 to 1955

    Like Weizmann, whom he admired, Sharett was a principled Zionist, an implacable opponent of fascism, and a practical realist, prepared to co-operate fully

    Moshe Sharett

    Moshe Sharett

    Moshe_Sharett

  • Francoist Catalonia
  • 1939–1975 period of Catalonia under the rule of Francisco Franco

    como único remedio para extirpar esos dos cánceres por termocauterio implacable"), while for Serrano Suñer, brother-in-law of Franco and Minister of the

    Francoist Catalonia

    Francoist Catalonia

    Francoist_Catalonia

  • Getúlio Vargas
  • President of Brazil (1930–1945; 1951–1954)

    evening of Tuesday, 24 August, but rumours spread that army officers were implacable. Unable to manage the situation, Vargas shot himself in the chest with

    Getúlio Vargas

    Getúlio Vargas

    Getúlio_Vargas

  • Oliver Cromwell
  • English military and political leader (1599–1658)

    study of Psalms 17 and 105 led him to tell Parliament that "they that are implacable and will not leave troubling the land may be speedily destroyed out of

    Oliver Cromwell

    Oliver Cromwell

    Oliver_Cromwell

  • Kengir uprising
  • 1954 Gulag prisoner revolt in Kazakh SSR

    civilization to the prisoners before the state was able to assert its implacable power again." At a 2004 reunion of Kengir prisoners, a survivor of the

    Kengir uprising

    Kengir uprising

    Kengir_uprising

  • List of Merlin characters
  • In seducing Morgana to join her, she helped to create Camelot's most implacable enemy. Morgana did not stop her attacks until she herself was killed by

    List of Merlin characters

    List_of_Merlin_characters

  • Ahad Ha'am
  • Hebrew-language essayist, poet, and critic of early Zionism (1856-1927)

    requirement arose in 1891 for a "spiritual centre" in Palestine; Bnei Moshe's implacable opposition to his support for Vladimir (Zeev) Tiomkin's ideal community

    Ahad Ha'am

    Ahad Ha'am

    Ahad_Ha'am

  • Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna of Russia
  • Grand Duchess of Russia

    present wife. After this, she became in the innocent victim of the Empress' implacable vengeance...The Empress not forgotten and humiliated her parents and siblings

    Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna of Russia

    Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna of Russia

    Grand_Duchess_Alexandra_Pavlovna_of_Russia

  • Agnese Visconti
  • Italian noblewoman

    Her father, Bernabò Visconti, was a cruel and ruthless despot and an implacable enemy of the Church. He seized the papal city of Bologna, rejected the

    Agnese Visconti

    Agnese_Visconti

  • Maurice Ravel
  • French composer (1875–1937)

    emulate Beethoven. Over the succeeding decades Lalo became Ravel's most implacable critic. In 1899 Ravel composed his first piece to become widely known

    Maurice Ravel

    Maurice Ravel

    Maurice_Ravel

  • Lewis Strauss
  • American governmental official (1896–1974)

    in favor of trying to arrange one, but Strauss was always one of those implacably opposed. Strauss would continue to minimize the dangers of Bravo fallout

    Lewis Strauss

    Lewis Strauss

    Lewis_Strauss

  • Enoch Powell
  • British politician (1912–1998)

    Conservatives and others, and as much as anything else it made Powell the implacable enemy of Heath, a fervent pro-European; but there was already enmity between

    Enoch Powell

    Enoch Powell

    Enoch_Powell

  • Frederick Barbarossa
  • Holy Roman Emperor from 1155 to 1190

    Saxony, Henry the Lion, would not be appeased, however, remaining an implacable enemy of the Hohenstaufen monarchy. Barbarossa had the duchies of Swabia

    Frederick Barbarossa

    Frederick Barbarossa

    Frederick_Barbarossa

  • Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor
  • Holy Roman Emperor from 1220 to 1250

    conditional peace from his Lombard enemies, even from Milan, his most implacable foe among the cities, which had sent a great sum of money. Perhaps from

    Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor

    Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor

    Frederick_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor

  • History of Wahhabism
  • Another prominent figure was Hammad ibn 'Atiq, the most rigorous and implacable of anti-Ottoman clerics. As a pupil of 'Abd al-Latif, Ibn 'Atiq weaponised

    History of Wahhabism

    History of Wahhabism

    History_of_Wahhabism

  • Second biennium of the Second Spanish Republic
  • Period of the Second Spanish Republic (1933–1936)

    he "respected the conscience of the majority" and that he opposed the "implacable execution of those laws", but that he would not "fail the law", which

    Second biennium of the Second Spanish Republic

    Second biennium of the Second Spanish Republic

    Second_biennium_of_the_Second_Spanish_Republic

  • Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas
  • 14/15th-century Scottish nobleman and soldier

    from Charles VII of France to lend his aid. Douglas's ally and Charles' implacable enemy, John the Fearless of Burgundy, had died in 1419, so Douglas willingly

    Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas

    Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas

    Archibald_Douglas,_4th_Earl_of_Douglas

  • Malayapuram Singaravelu
  • Freedom fighter and one of the founding member of Communist Party of India

    word, if it does not mean down-right self-purification. Stubborn and implacable resistance against internal corruption is enough resistance against the

    Malayapuram Singaravelu

    Malayapuram Singaravelu

    Malayapuram_Singaravelu

  • History of antisemitism in the United States
  • European antisemitism, Jewish Americans faced significant periods of hostility, including official government actions during the American Civil War and

    History of antisemitism in the United States

    History of antisemitism in the United States

    History_of_antisemitism_in_the_United_States

  • Assassinations of Jeffrey Brent Ball and Todd Ray Wilson
  • Missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

    brother. Some assassinations of missionaries are because of anti-Mormon hostility, some are due to political reasons, and some are simply random attacks

    Assassinations of Jeffrey Brent Ball and Todd Ray Wilson

    Assassinations_of_Jeffrey_Brent_Ball_and_Todd_Ray_Wilson

  • Pierre Boulez
  • French composer and conductor (1925–2016)

    death under the title The Magus, Alex Ross described Boulez as "affable, implacable, unknowable". In an article published for Boulez's 80th birthday in The

    Pierre Boulez

    Pierre Boulez

    Pierre_Boulez

  • Huguenots
  • Historical religious group of French Protestants

    powers, and openly revolting against central power. The rebellions were implacably suppressed by the French crown.[citation needed] Louis XIV inherited the

    Huguenots

    Huguenots

    Huguenots

  • Hephaestion
  • Macedonian nobleman and general (c. 356–324 BC)

    and the other, that of Philip's older veterans in particular, whose implacable resentment of Persian ways was well represented by Cleitus. The cavalry

    Hephaestion

    Hephaestion

    Hephaestion

  • Left-wing politics
  • Political ideologies favouring social equality and egalitarianism

    zealotry, susceptibility to Manichean interpretations of human events, implacable hatred of opponents, intolerance toward dissenters and deviants, and an

    Left-wing politics

    Left-wing_politics

  • Ted Kennedy
  • American lawyer and politician (1932–2009)

    stride. He was a celebrity, sometimes a self-parody, a hearty friend, an implacable foe, a man of large faith and large flaws, a melancholy character who

    Ted Kennedy

    Ted Kennedy

    Ted_Kennedy

  • John Comyn, Earl of Buchan
  • Scottish nobleman (c. 1260–1308)

    after the conquest. Edward I, despite his fierce reputation, and his implacable hatred for men like Wallace, was by political and economic necessity forced

    John Comyn, Earl of Buchan

    John Comyn, Earl of Buchan

    John_Comyn,_Earl_of_Buchan

  • Propitiation
  • Appeasing or making well-disposed a deity

    Dictionary, Morris states that "Propitiation is a reminder that God is implacably opposed to everything that is evil, that his opposition may properly be

    Propitiation

    Propitiation

  • Black Panther Party
  • American political organization (1966–1982)

    involved in many fatal firefights with police. Newton declared: Malcolm, implacable to the ultimate degree, held out to the Black masses ... liberation from

    Black Panther Party

    Black_Panther_Party

  • August Strindberg
  • Swedish writer and painter (1849–1912)

    death in 1912. The Feud served to revive Strindberg's reputation as an implacable enemy of bourgeois tastes, while also reestablishing beyond doubt his

    August Strindberg

    August Strindberg

    August_Strindberg

  • Saint of Killers
  • Fictional character

    with artist Steve Dillon. The Saint is described as "a grim, taciturn, implacable killing machine" with supernatural abilities involving divinity, immortality

    Saint of Killers

    Saint_of_Killers

  • Kronstadt rebellion
  • 1921 anti-Bolshevik revolt in Russia

    young and insecure state, faced with a rebellious population at home and implacable enemies abroad who longed to see the Bolsheviks ousted from power. More

    Kronstadt rebellion

    Kronstadt rebellion

    Kronstadt_rebellion

  • History of the United States (1964–1980)
  • Reagan and the conservative movement. Reagan saw the Soviet Union as an implacable enemy that had to be defeated, not compromised with. A new element emerged

    History of the United States (1964–1980)

    History of the United States (1964–1980)

    History_of_the_United_States_(1964–1980)

  • Assassination of José Calvo Sotelo
  • 1936 killing of Spanish monarchist leader

    of any complicity in that crime, easily demonstrable, it was a cruel, implacable condemnation. It is not surprising that, today [1982], he was the driver

    Assassination of José Calvo Sotelo

    Assassination of José Calvo Sotelo

    Assassination_of_José_Calvo_Sotelo

  • Vichy France
  • Collaborationist regime in France (1940–1944)

    Italian Ambassador to France that "England has always been France's most implacable enemy" and went on to say that France had "two hereditary enemies", namely

    Vichy France

    Vichy France

    Vichy_France

  • Sonderweg
  • Theory in German historiography

    Germany will remain on a separate path, "always placing the spirit of its implacable technical discipline at the service of those visions of the future that

    Sonderweg

    Sonderweg

  • Spanish military conspiracy of 1936
  • 1936 military plot

    enigmas del Caudillo. Perfiles desconocidos de un dictador temeroso e implacable, Madrid 1992, ISBN 9788480680097, p. 83, Ramón Serrano Suñer, Política

    Spanish military conspiracy of 1936

    Spanish military conspiracy of 1936

    Spanish_military_conspiracy_of_1936

  • George Panu
  • Moldavian, later Romanian memoirist, literary critic, journalist and politician

    experiences in the Junimea literary society, of which he had become an implacable adversary. Born in Iași, his parents were the army officer Vasile Panu

    George Panu

    George Panu

    George_Panu

  • Gildo Insfrán
  • Argentine politician

    clarified. Roberts, Carlos M. Reymundo (23 July 2017). "Formosa: el reino implacable del todopoderoso Gildo Insfrán". La Nacion (in Spanish). Retrieved 24

    Gildo Insfrán

    Gildo Insfrán

    Gildo_Insfrán

  • René Girard
  • French anthropologist and philosopher (1923–2015)

    the illusion of the authenticity of one's own desires; the novelists implacably expose all the diversity of lies, dissimulations, manoeuvres, and the

    René Girard

    René Girard

    René_Girard

  • Arbegnoch
  • Ethiopian resistance fighters during Italian East Africa

    from Rome to the governor to extend the occupation and to "be harsh, implacable with all the Abyssinians", Mussolini called for a "regime of absolute

    Arbegnoch

    Arbegnoch

    Arbegnoch

  • Osraige
  • Medieval southeastern Irish kingdom

    wife was Máel Muire ingen Arailt, likely an Uí Ímair bride. He was an implacable opponent of Brian Boruma in his expansion over southern Ireland, being

    Osraige

    Osraige

    Osraige

  • Negotiation
  • Dialogue intended to reach an agreement

    the most widely studied model of one's opponent. A state is presumed implacably hostile, and contra-indicators of this are ignored. They are dismissed

    Negotiation

    Negotiation

    Negotiation

  • List of English words of French origin (D–I)
  • impertinent imperturbable impetuosity impetuous impi impiety impious implacable implant implantation implication implicit imply importance important importation

    List of English words of French origin (D–I)

    List_of_English_words_of_French_origin_(D–I)

  • Prince Eugene of Savoy
  • Military commander in the service of Austria (1663–1736)

    Spanish Succession war. The most senior member of the council and an implacable enemy of Eugene was the Archbishop of Valencia, Antonio Folch de Cardona;

    Prince Eugene of Savoy

    Prince Eugene of Savoy

    Prince_Eugene_of_Savoy

  • Josephine Butler
  • English feminist and social reformer (1828–1906)

    oppose the Contagious Diseases Acts was slow, and the government was implacable in its support of the measures. At a meeting of regional LNA branches

    Josephine Butler

    Josephine Butler

    Josephine_Butler

  • Noël Browne
  • Irish politician (1915–1997)

    reversing the party's anti-coalition stance. This turned Browne into an implacable opponent of Corish's leadership. In 1971, Browne issued a speech attacking

    Noël Browne

    Noël Browne

    Noël_Browne

  • William F. Buckley Jr.
  • American conservative author and commentator (1925–2008)

    intellectual and moral" and "the incongruity of tone, that hard, schematic, implacable, unyielding, dogmatism that is in itself intrinsically objectionable,

    William F. Buckley Jr.

    William F. Buckley Jr.

    William_F._Buckley_Jr.

  • Seventh-day Adventist interfaith relations
  • Relationship between SDA and other denominations

    with hostility by the majority of the North American Christian churches which existed at that time. The early Adventists were treated with hostility because

    Seventh-day Adventist interfaith relations

    Seventh-day_Adventist_interfaith_relations

  • John Osborne
  • English playwright (1929–1994)

    prompted by self-interest. I wanted to confound my pitted complexion, implacable daily headaches, throbbing glands, dish-cloth hair and dandruff. That

    John Osborne

    John_Osborne

  • Nguyễn Văn Thiệu
  • President of South Vietnam from 1967 to 1975

    Saigon was privately supportive of the aim as Taylor and Khánh had become implacable enemies, but they did not fully back the move as they regarded it as poorly

    Nguyễn Văn Thiệu

    Nguyễn Văn Thiệu

    Nguyễn_Văn_Thiệu

  • Néstor Kirchner
  • President of Argentina from 2003 to 2007

    October 2010). "Un chico formado bajo los implacables vientos del sur" [A kid raised under the implacable winds of the south] (in Spanish). Clarín. Archived

    Néstor Kirchner

    Néstor Kirchner

    Néstor_Kirchner

  • Gino Bibbi
  • activities during this period, he is reported to have been surrounded by "implacable antifascists", identified as "republicans" or "giellisti", and the accompanying

    Gino Bibbi

    Gino Bibbi

    Gino_Bibbi

  • Commissioners' Plan of 1811
  • Street plan of Manhattan

    negative comments about the grid, from Vincent Scully's calling it an "implacable gridiron" to the comment of Richard Pluz, an historian of housing, that

    Commissioners' Plan of 1811

    Commissioners' Plan of 1811

    Commissioners'_Plan_of_1811

  • Alexander Pope
  • English poet (1688–1744)

    brought the poet in his own time the hostility of its victims and their sympathizers, who pursued him implacably from then on with a few damaging truths

    Alexander Pope

    Alexander Pope

    Alexander_Pope

  • History of Afghanistan (1978–1992)
  • Period of Afghan history from 1978 to 1992

    and his followers slipped into and out of these formulas, despite the implacable opposition of most of the mujahedin leaders. The peace prospect faltered

    History of Afghanistan (1978–1992)

    History of Afghanistan (1978–1992)

    History_of_Afghanistan_(1978–1992)

  • Left Socialist-Revolutionaries
  • Revolutionary political party in Russia from 1917 to 1921

    death penalty (May 21) and the sharpening of terror made the Left SRs an implacable enemy of the Bolsheviks. The substitution of the elected soviets led in

    Left Socialist-Revolutionaries

    Left Socialist-Revolutionaries

    Left_Socialist-Revolutionaries

  • Rudolf von Scheliha
  • German resistance fighter (1897–1942)

    Hans Frank appeared in the foreign press, von Scheliha became his most implacable enemy and began to resist. Von Scheliha also helped Poles and Jews flee

    Rudolf von Scheliha

    Rudolf von Scheliha

    Rudolf_von_Scheliha

  • Montigny Mission
  • French diplomatic mission to Cambodia, Siam and Vietnam in 1856

    himself under protection of any European nation, who will save him from his implacable enemies, the Siamese and the Cochin Chinese." Sir James Brooke the British

    Montigny Mission

    Montigny_Mission

  • Lexicon of Musical Invective
  • Nicolas Slonimsky's work

    is simply the unbelievable repetition of the same rhythm... with the implacable recurrence of a cabaret tune, of stupefying vulgarity, rivaling in its

    Lexicon of Musical Invective

    Lexicon of Musical Invective

    Lexicon_of_Musical_Invective

  • Arab nationalism
  • Political ideology

    Brotherhood. While in theory Islamic revivalists (for example Sayyid Qutb) were implacably opposed to nationalism as a European pollution intended to weaken Islamic

    Arab nationalism

    Arab nationalism

    Arab_nationalism

  • Survival horror
  • Video game subgenre

    tension. Edge stated it was about "fear, panic, terror and facing an implacable, relentless foe who’s going to get you in the end" and considers it "the

    Survival horror

    Survival_horror

  • A Handful of Dust
  • 1934 novel by Evelyn Waugh

    old gorgeous, careless note of contempt and disillusionment. Gradually, implacably, the note changes and deepens". A later critic, John Cunningham, recognises

    A Handful of Dust

    A_Handful_of_Dust

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Online names & meanings

  • Tapati
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Tapati

    The suns daughter, A river

  • Mavji
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Mavji

    Lord Shiva; Lord Krishna

  • Vayshini
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu

    Vayshini

  • Dhianvir
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Dhianvir

    Brave Absorbed in Contemplation

  • Chadd
  • Boy/Male

    American, Anglo, Australian, British, Chinese, English, German

    Chadd

    Fierce; Protector

  • Meethu | மீதுஂ, மீடுஂ 
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Meethu | மீதுஂ, மீடுஂ 

    Sweet

  • Sameea |
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim

    Sameea |

    Blessings, One who listens, Exalted, Noble, Much praised

  • Marquisha
  • Girl/Female

    French

    Marquisha

    Royalty. French royalty title.

  • Aaravi | ஆரவீ
  • Girl/Female

    Tamil

    Aaravi | ஆரவீ

    Peace

  • Callender
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Callender

    English : occupational name for a person who finished freshly woven cloth by passing it between heavy rollers to compress the weave. The English term for such a worker, calender, is from Old French calandrier, calandreur, from the verb calandrer.Scottish : variant spelling of Callander.Variant spelling of German Kalander (see Kolander).

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Other words and meanings similar to

IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY

IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY

  • Placability
  • n.

    The quality or state of being placable or appeasable; placable disposition.

  • Irreconcilable
  • a.

    Not reconcilable; implacable; incompatible; inconsistent; disagreeing; as, irreconcilable enemies, statements.

  • Implacable
  • a.

    Incapable of ebign relieved or assuaged; inextinguishable.

  • Unplacable
  • a.

    Implacable.

  • Implacably
  • adv.

    In an implacable manner.

  • Alcohol
  • n.

    An impalpable powder.

  • Pacificable
  • a.

    Placable.

  • Implacableness
  • n.

    The quality of being implacable; implacability.

  • Impacable
  • a.

    Not to be appeased or quieted.

  • Pacable
  • a.

    Placable.

  • Impeccable
  • n.

    One who is impeccable; esp., one of a sect of Gnostic heretics who asserted their sinlessness.

  • Inexpiable
  • a.

    Incapable of being mollified or appeased; relentless; implacable.

  • Incensement
  • n.

    Fury; rage; heat; exasperation; as, implacable incensement.

  • Deadly
  • adv.

    In an implacable manner; destructively.

  • Impalpability
  • n.

    The quality of being impalpable.

  • Impeccant
  • a.

    Sinless; impeccable.

  • Impalpably
  • adv.

    In an impalpable manner.

  • Implacability
  • n.

    The quality or state of being implacable.

  • Impalpable
  • a.

    Not apprehensible, or readily apprehensible, by the mind; unreal; as, impalpable distinctions.

  • Implacable
  • a.

    Not placable; not to be appeased; incapable of being pacified; inexorable; as, an implacable prince.