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[ US /ˈmɪɫətənsi/ ]
[ UK /mˈɪlɪtənsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a militant aggressiveness

How To Use militancy In A Sentence

  • The religious experiments of Archbishop Laud reactivated Puritan militancy.
  • There's quietism on the one hand and militancy on the other and much depends on the conditions that people find themselves in, in any one point in time.
  • With the inception of militancy in Kashmir most of the Kashmiri Pandits who left their homes in early 1990s and had come to perform 'pooja' in "Mata Ragnya" temple at Tulmula area of Ganderbal in Kashmir on Sunday said that they miss Kashmir. Thousands of Kashmiri Pandits,visit their homeland to pay obeisance at Kheer Bhawani in Kashmir
  • Before 1914, neither peasant land hunger nor working-class militancy were abating.
  • These forces were threatening the domestics to the point where both sides knew some progress simply had to be made and that served to defang the militancy and bullheadedness that have characterized negotiations heretofore.
  • The slightest hint of militancy was enough to bar a group from being funded.
  • That demand itself was to a large extent created through official policy in response to the black militancy of the 1970s and early 1980s.
  • Unlike casual labour, skilled workers were heir to a tradition of militancy.
  • And one of the sort of twists here is that gas flaring, which is some of the worst in the world in the Niger Delta is down, because production is down on the other side of militancy. CNN Transcript May 23, 2008
  • They're proposing a plan to extirpate themselves from the well-deserved guilt that they have for fermenting terror and militancy worldwide.
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