How To Use Fractious In A Sentence

  • Interestingly, for all Rauch's fractious subject matter, his painterly touch isn't turbulent at all, but instead measured, calm and neat.
  • Stripped naked of additives and processes, save a pinch of stabilising sulphur dioxide for all but the purists, the finished product is surprising and fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • The six fractious republics are demanding autonomy.
  • It will be interesting to see how long this fractious mood lasts. Times, Sunday Times
  • An already fractious situation then takes a turn for the worse when they hear a rapping at the door. Times, Sunday Times
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  • The council had promised a review of the rating system and had put the idea out for consultation, but when it came to the vote, it fractiously split down the middle.
  • The fractious Monday followed a rough-and-tumble weekend, as the two sparred over an Obama leaflet accusing Clinton of saying the North American Free Trade Agreement was a boon to the economy. CNN Transcript Feb 25, 2008
  • A system without it could lead to division and multiple parties - and imagine the fractious problem of coalition governments.
  • This will be a fractious and unstable government, riven by internal factional struggles and backbench rebellions.
  • It is a patchwork of Clan, tribal loyalties, religious zealotry, appallingly poor, indemicly corrupt politician, power mad factionally torn military and a corporate sector which is (not surprisingy greedy and in for their chop) all of which are in varing degrees fractiousness and discontentedness. Pakistan "Emergency" Ban of Constitution, Independent Media-- A Media Emergency In USA Too
  • The portents are not good for one of his fractious demeanour. Times, Sunday Times
  • He suggests only that in time, we will become so weary of our punitive politics that the system will, out of necessity, "outgrow" or "outlive" its current fractiousness. Fight Club
  • Communists catapulted from 45 to 157 seats in the 450-seat Duma to dominate a fractious chamber divided by eight political parties.
  • A cursory look at the fines imposed recall many fractious series that remain in memory and some spats that do not. Times, Sunday Times
  • For 110 years, it has remained a fractious but unitary organization.
  • Indeed, many negotiations have been slowed down because of the fractiousness of the nondiplomatic participants. Whose Cause Is It, Anyway?
  • But over the years he has wormed - sorry, worked - his way into the Prime Minister's affections, a rare achievement in this fractious and fratricidal administration.
  • It has not approached him with any offer of a new role and their fractious relationship means that is unlikely to change. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'If I find it necessary to carry you away, pick-a-back, o' course I shall leave it the least bit o 'time possible afore you; but allow me to express a hope as you won't reduce me to extremities; in saying wich, I merely quote wot the nobleman said to the fractious pennywinkle, ven he vouldn't come out of his shell by means of a pin, and he conseqvently began to be afeered that he should be obliged to crack him in the parlour door.' The Pickwick papers
  • A whirlwind start set the tone for the game: the exchanges were hard and physical and there were some fractious moments as tempers flared in the struggle for superiority.
  • I must say that the most enlightened thing you said in your post was, in an odd analogy, that the reason university faculty politics become so bitter and fractious is because there is "... so little at stake," That´s it precisely. The Lake Chapala Society
  • Exploiting Lebanon's fractiousness, Syria pushed its allies to undermine the pro-Western coalition that won Lebanon's general election in 2005.
  • In recent weeks the noises from next door had become more fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the arbitration tribunal issues a final ruling that BP did contravene its shareholder pact with AAR, that could in turn lead to a further escalation in hostilities between the two camps, which have had a fractious relationship since the joint venture was formed in 2003. Tribunal to Rule on BP Dispute With Russian Partners
  • He had worked with the diverse, fractious Iraqi opposition.
  • That is no way to govern, especially when he heads a fractious coalition and his party holds just 11% of the seats in Parliament.
  • Calming his lungs, he listened to the fractious chittering of insects in the forest. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • But it's only a third of the amount I asked for," protested Demi fractiously. 'Whaddya mean, no adverbs?' asked Tom swiftly.
  • rockets were much too fractious to be tested near thickly populated areas
  • An already fractious situation then takes a turn for the worse when they hear a rapping at the door. Times, Sunday Times
  • Suffice to say, I would not recommend this level of preparation when travelling with a fractious three-year-old and a grumpy husband.
  • fractious components of a communication system
  • Fractious division, corruption and the misuse of power rob the people of national hope, a loss which leaves them to survive solipsistically in an all-too-familiar despair.
  • The fractious Monday followed a rough and tumble weekend as the two sparred over an Obama leaflet accusing Clinton of saying the North American Free Trade Agreement was a boon to the economy. CNN Transcript Feb 25, 2008
  • Children often get fractious and tearful when tired.
  • He was getting fractious and crabby while I was getting panicky.
  • This displayed much-needed savvy, yet the SNP leader still struggles to impose his authority on his increasingly fractious and directionless party.
  • Their unlikely, openly fractious relationship drives the group. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their unlikely, openly fractious relationship drives the group. Times, Sunday Times
  • All are members of a close-knit but fractious group that has dominated the American debate over the Arab - Israeli problem.
  • And unless British, French and German politicians start to be honest, the EU will implode into fractious and competing nationalisms that have always lain under the surface of European rhetoric.
  • People with pain can be fractious and difficult, and elderly people may not be paragons of charm and cheerfulness.
  • Republicans may be struggling in the dunk tank since the last national elections, holding onto each other for warmth and flotation in the Senate and House and fractiously searching for a new overarchi ... Phil Bronstein: GOP Pols Believe in Outsourcing -- the Dirty Work
  • o 'time possible afore you; but allow me to express a hope as you won't reduce me to extremities; in saying wich, I merely quote wot the nobleman said to the fractious pennywinkle, ven he vouldn't come out of his shell by means of a pin, and he conseqvently began to be afeered that he should be obliged to crack him in the parlour door.' The Pickwick Papers
  • It will be interesting to see how long this fractious mood lasts. Times, Sunday Times
  • A cursory look at the fines imposed recall many fractious series that remain in memory and some spats that do not. Times, Sunday Times
  • They insist on leaving the dishes unwashed and she persists in leaving fractious notes telling them to clean up. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was getting fractious and crabby while I was getting panicky because I knew there was something else and I couldn't remember what it was.
  • So must his fractious party. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nancy was in a fractious mood.
  • She proposed a walk along the front, away from the holiday bustle, the family scenes, the fractious palm trees. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • More recently, the Warren Buffet-inspired tax debate, regarding whether millionaires should pay at least the same tax rate as the common worker, has surfaced fractiously, pitting President Obama and Democrats against most Republicans. America cannot afford such inequality | Michael Shank
  • More recently, the Warren Buffett-inspired tax debate, regarding whether millionaires should pay at least the same tax rate as the common worker, has surfaced fractiously, pitting President Obama and Democrats against most Republicans. Michael Shank: Why 'Occupy Wall Street' Protests? America's High Rates of Poverty & Income Inequality
  • And I'm usually alright in the morning but by about lunchtime in the afternoon I tend to get very irritable and fractious and I'm not quite sure why.
  • They are, however, extraordinarily difficult to discipline, incredibly fractious.
  • Stripped naked of additives and processes, save a pinch of stabilising sulphur dioxide for all but the purists, the finished product is surprising and fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • All are members of a close-knit but fractious group that has dominated the American debate over the Arab - Israeli problem.
  • It was definitely not just the voice of a fractious, heat-loggy crewman. Mission to Moulokin
  • Their outlook towards a venomous German attempt to do something "frightfully" nasty, is very similar to a large and powerful nurse dealing with a fractious child -- sort of: "Now, then, Master Frankie, you mustn't kick and scream like that. Bullets & Billets
  • In contrast to this perception, Miller paints a more realistic portrait of a motley and often fractious group of militants.
  • He was chosen for his ability to unite the fractious coalition and for his ability to connect to people.
  • For all of the rhetoric about teamwork in the health professions, most work is fractiously divided.
  • For all the region's fractious history, its transformation of the range from battle ground to recreation area occurred surprisingly early.
  • The party, languishing in the polls, is increasingly fractious and rebellious. Times, Sunday Times
  • As Britain embarks on its own fractious exit from a regional club, some are now looking towards the former colony for lessons. Times, Sunday Times
  • The impression emerging in the press is of the Scottish Executive as a screeching cathouse filled with fractious and uncontrollable ministers, plotting factions, and burned-out civil servants led by a First Minister who cannot say no.
  • I've had the odd fractious ding-dong along the way, but have always managed to reach a suitable resolution in due course.
  • the horse was behaving fractiously and refused to jump
  • The stage is bare and empty, it looks like a typical display of Volksbühne churlishness, ingeniousness and fractiousness.
  • a fractious animal that would not submit to the harness
  • While the story has gotten the facts correct, I disagree with the statement that Ma "..has worked hard to unite Taiwan's fractious communal groups ... Kuo Kuan-ying goes international
  • The youngest children get fractious and older family members get irritable trying to keep the peace.
  • His relationship with his brothers, who were also in the business, became increasingly fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • A fractious relationship with some players and anxiety on the board combined to make his position untenable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Boldly entering the increasingly fractious struggle between church and state, Nestorius apparently ordered Pulcheria to be turned away at the gate. Caesars’ Wives
  • an incorrigibly fractious young man
  • Despite their fractious love-hate relationship, they were a cracking team.
  • The unusual balancing act between chaos and domesticity represented in “War Spirit at Home” serves as a direct and poignant metaphor for the tenuous balance that the United States as a nation was struggling to achieve in the fractious post-bellum era, when Spencer completed this work. Unpacking Feminist Content in Lilly Martin Spencer’s “War Spirit at Home” « Gender Across Borders
  • The art of Belgian political leadership consists of bringing consensus to a broad and fractious coalition.
  • After going backwards at the election and losing ground in opinion polls since, Opposition MPs are cranky, fractious and looking for answers.
  • The party, languishing in the polls, is increasingly fractious and rebellious. Times, Sunday Times
  • He wants to show that Labour can be a ‘natural’ party of government and not just a brief, fractious interlude between long periods of Conservatism.
  • It has not approached him with any offer of a new role and their fractious relationship means that is unlikely to change. Times, Sunday Times
  • A fractious relationship with some players and anxiety on the board combined to make his position untenable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Moody's cites what it calls the fiscal and economic conditions caused by the damaged power plant along with Cyprus' fractious political climate. Cyprus Cabinet Resigns Amid Public Outcry
  • An already fractious situation has just got more difficult.
  • Instead, he argues that if the Henry VIII/Anthony St Leger policy of "surrender and regrant" had been consistently applied, Ireland could have been integrated into the Tudor realms without much more difficulty than Wales or the far north of England, with the Gaelic chieftains converted to loyal-ish subjects rather than fractious objects of military adventure. September Books 19) Tudor Ireland
  • ‘The psychological establishment is not a monolith; it is more like a parliament made up of small fractious parties,’ Garcia writes.
  • In the 1630s, in particular, he presided over a fractious chapter, divided by personal and some ideological conflict.
  • Stripped naked of additives and processes, save a pinch of stabilising sulphur dioxide for all but the purists, the finished product is surprising and fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some of them can be very demanding and ungrateful, even obstreperous and fractious.
  • But over the years he has wormed - sorry, worked - his way into the Prime Minister's affections, a rare achievement in this fractious and fratricidal administration.
  • Former Health Minister George Smitherman earned the moniker "furious George" during a round of earlier fractious negotiations in 2005. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • My follicular kingman homes for sale drowse fractiousness me this scrum to lender inauspiciously his defenseless panicle, his disorganisation to curb, and his steradian for noncausative to mustache. Rational Review
  • It wasn't till 1968, on the floor of the fractious Democratic convention, that the two finally came face to face; and the colloquy was as civilized as you'd expect.
  • Thus all the world's ambition gets funnelled through schools, turning academia into fractious circuses of human conflict and desperately competing agendas.
  • For the fractious Tea Party movement," Wilentz writes, "Beck -- a former drive-time radio jockey, a recovering alcoholic, and a Mormon convert -- has emerged as both a unifying figure and an intellectual guide. Megan Doherty: My Walk With Glenn Beck, 21st Century Con Man
  • The management is difficult, the people get pretty fractious, and it starts feeling like the early years when one is in Opposition.
  • I believe that Peter Rousselot is the best candidate for the job, and that is why I encourage all DPVA members to support him for the Chairmanship. "-" kindler "Fairfax, VA" We are just beginning to emerge from a fractious 2009 state race and a 2010 Congressional hammering. Blue Virginia Executive Board Endorses Peter Roussselot for DPVA Chair
  • Exploiting Lebanon's fractiousness, Syria pushed its allies to undermine the pro-Western coalition that won Lebanon's general election in 2005.
  • Two horses were approaching from the high, barren hills; the man in front was having difficulty controlling his fractious horse with one hand.
  • ‘You should know that if you were at a convent school,’ he says, a bit fractiously.
  • There's an old joke about university faculty politics: the reason it gets so bitter and fractious is because there is so little at stake. The Lake Chapala Society
  • One potential course would be a breakdown of central control and a return to fractious regionalism.
  • Laurie Sansom's production hits its emotional straps, and Jones delivers moving scene after scene of rising, fractious, heart-rending drama and flinty, defiant humour.
  • He was known as a conciliator in fractious times, diligently maintaining good relationships with people of all political stripes. The Berkeley Daily Planet, The East Bay's Independent Newspaper
  • All the indicators pointed towards a decent game of football although the game's early spell was fractious and ill-tempered.
  • But with his old history professor Henry Adams and other friends, Lodge was known as a genial host, and, when political bêtes noires did not rear their fractious heads, he could work considerable charm as a guest. The Five of Hearts
  • He had worked with the diverse, fractious Iraqi opposition.
  • So must his fractious party. Times, Sunday Times
  • Republicans may be struggling in the dunk tank since the last national elections, holding onto each other for warmth and flotation in the Senate and House and fractiously searching for a new overarching identity to avoid being the outlying party for the next several decades. Phil Bronstein: GOP Pols Believe in Outsourcing -- the Dirty Work
  • Moody's cited what it calls the fiscal and economic conditions caused by a damaged power plant along with Cyprus' fractious political climate. Cyprus President Appoints Cabinet
  • A cursory look at the fines imposed recall many fractious series that remain in memory and some spats that do not. Times, Sunday Times
  • In recent weeks the noises from next door had become more fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • His relationship with his brothers, who were also in the business, became increasingly fractious. Times, Sunday Times
  • Because of the fractious, even fratricidal, nature of local resistance movements, local government officials were often caught between the forces of rival guerrilla chiefs.
  • And the actors were fractious and the crew was muttering.
  • The nature of civilization is that it is a framework wherein people may live together, however fractiously.

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