entrenchment

[ UK /ɛntɹˈɛnt‍ʃmənt/ ]
[ US /ɛnˈtɹɛntʃmənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. an entrenched fortification; a position protected by trenches
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use entrenchment In A Sentence

  • There has been a shift in opinion on the issue after a decade of entrenchment.
  • In line with the "entrenchment effect", the excess control extent of ultimate controlling shareholder is negatively related to corporate transparency.
  • Sandy Levinson and I have argued that partisan entrenchment is the most important source of constitutional change outside of Article V. Balkinization
  • There has been a shift in opinion on the issue after a decade of entrenchment.
  • The only solution to the long-term entrenchment of our unemployment crisis is bold structural reform of our labour and investment markets. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • There has been a shift in opinion on the issue after a decade of entrenchment.
  • I sudder to think of the foreign policy nightmares, and the reentrenchment of terrorism in the world should he be in charge. Legitgov
  • I can only assume that this represents a further entrenchment within the permanent North British government, even to the extent of denying that incinerators emit CO2, pretty much along the same lines of the expressed attitude of waste disposal companies that incineration is a liability-free method of waste disposal. Greengairs Incinerator
  • Under the frame of property, the paper examines incentive effect and entrenchment effect of big shareholder by researching Chinese listed company sample in 2005.
  • It is the Africans who are moving, shifting, thinking, plotting, and therefore digging their own entrenchment in this land upon which so many others have, through wiles and stratagems of their own, entrenched themselves here.
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy