[ UK /ɪnˈɪmɪkə‍l/ ]
[ US /ˌɪˈnɪmɪkəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not friendly
    an inimical critic
    an unfriendly act of aggression
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How To Use inimical In A Sentence

  • I barken back to the rogue Taken Howler, the dead unexpectedly alive and inimical. Shadow Games
  • In some cases, security meant subduing forces inimical to that government.
  • The important question is what can be done to counter political attacks which are inimical to the effective operation of the judicial system?
  • an inimical critic
  • Both the leaders stressed the need for better co-ordination among the alliance partners and facing the challenge of the situation collectively to defeat the forces inimical to restoration of peace.
  • He argued that our existing governmental arrangements are inimical to forging a sense of fraternity.
  • It therefore, becomes a source of deep concern when we hear that among the men of God, there are some bent on causing confusion in the nation by inciting people to involve themselves in activities inimical to the State.
  • This term indicative of collaboration of castes and classes should be fundamentally inimical to the caste or class struggle of the oppressed and exploited. Kafila
  • Now, when one must come into a place totally strange, totally inimical ?
  • Reinforcing and paralleling this problem is the way the current culture in politics and business is inimical to the long-term investment in time and resources needed for the opportunities of this technology to be properly realised.
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