How To Use Strain In A Sentence

  • Assuming that 15 pound breaking strain line is used, an angler using monofilament might have to use a six or eight ounce sinker and use a 20 lb class rod to carry that sinker weight.
  • I found it a bit of a strain making conversation with her.
  • Now that I think about it, direct property distraint was a recognized means of compelling welchers to fulfill their obligations in the quasi-anarchic Brehon laws of Celtic Ireland, even if it was a case of tenants or debtors going after landlords or creditors. Shameless Self-promotion Sunday #30
  • He was still very young, especially by Drow standards, but his smile had given way to an expression of restraint, and his little arms and legs had grown long and thick.
  • However, the emphasis on structural constraints and formal controls provides only a partial view.
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  • Allow the soup to sit for at least half an hour and then strain out all the vegetables to leave a clear broth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Immunoproteomics, a powerful tool for studying antigens at the proteomic level, allowed a comparative investigation of the immunogenicity of capsulate and non-capsulate strains of L. garvieae for vaccine development.
  • If we fail to develop emotional intelligence, or cannot control or restrain our emotions, we will lose our intellectual ability to think, reason and live rationally and intelligently. Dr T.P.Chia 
  • The amount of strain that measuring the heights of all admitted children puts on the medical and nursing staff should not be underestimated.
  • Migration into the cities is putting a strain on already stretched resources.
  • There are other constraints on the firm's capital, however, most importantly perhaps, the takeover constraint.
  • But don't strain yourselves getting out of your new squad car.
  • Faced by those constraints, the soldiers of the Royal Anglians face an uphill task and the official three-year time limit is already looking decidedly niggardly.
  • These structural problems will act as a major constraint on any potential recovery in the housing market.
  • The principle of the itinerary engine is simple: from a departure address and an arrival address, or from longitude/latitude coordinates, Maporama International's servers calculate an optimized itinerary, respecting several constraints: the shortest or the more rapid itinerary, a pedestrian or car itinerary, a multimodal itinerary… Internet News: Travel Archives
  • She hadn't seen Kenta much, but when she had in the last week he had been smiling nervously and in a strained manner.
  • Equally clearly, in these circumstances the quantity of will be a constraint upon.
  • He got more bruises and cuts, muscle pulls and strains than he could remember.
  • Actually, this particular strain of e. coli is going to be more likely to have been spread by humans, manure (even the so-called organic stuff) or animals, than water. Spinach
  • 'The first principles of commercial activity have retreated to earth's maziest penetralia, where no tides are! is it not so, Skepsey?' said Mr. Fenellan, whose initiative and exuberance in loquency had been restrained by a slight oppression, known to guests; especially to the guest in the earlier process of his magnification and illumination by virtue of a grand old wine; and also when the news he has to communicate may be a stir to unpleasant heaps. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • We would expand the Smart award scheme for small companies which has been constrained by funding resources.
  • High rises waste tremendous amounts of energy and probably strain sewage and other facilities. Matthew Yglesias » Density and Building Height
  • So this is a linguistic constraint.
  • Spring is the season for groin pulls - that is, straining the adductor muscles that run along the inside of your thighs.
  • Further work is needed at the conceptual level in this area to determine the exact nature of the constraints required.
  • You both reacted in different ways to what was clearly a really tough period of strain. The Sun
  • For the late fifth and early sixth centuries, however, he was less constrained.
  • Strain, and stir the mustard powder into the liquid. The Natural Beauty Book - cruelty-free cosmetics to make at home
  • These populations offer a unique opportunity to monitor evolutionary dynamics in ancestral populations that harbor multiple strains of Wolbachia.
  • There was a strained silence for a while and then in the distance there was a clap of thunder.
  • The regulation might almost be judged in restraint of trade. Times, Sunday Times
  • This constraint would effectively limit the amount of vehicles that a firm could service. 2.
  • The rebeck, to whose loud and harsh strains the medieval rustic had danced, [Footnote: The rebeck probably had been borrowed from the Mohammedans.] by the addition of a fourth string and A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1.
  • She was looking strained and had dark circles beneath her eyes.
  • Its unsparing account of an atrocious crime is offset by admirable dramatic restraint. Times, Sunday Times
  • [Phages] are specific to a particular bacterial strain, so researchers will have to isolate and culture a phage for every potential coral pathogen, which isn't feasible. Global warming takes a toll on coral reefs
  • Sure enough, this Heller language has served to protect a remarkable variety of federal gun restrictions challenged since Heller, including bans on gun possession by felons, domestic violence misdemeanants, and persons under restraining orders, bans on sawed-off shotguns and machine guns, laws restricting guns in school zones, post offices, and other public property, and others. Dennis A. Henigan: The Gun Issue Is Back in the Supreme Court: What Does It Mean?
  • Fitch cautioned that the country's sovereign ratings remained constrained by relatively low levels of external liquidity as well as what it described as formidable social and structural challenges. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Liberal proponents of American Values praise the freedom that opens the floodgates to gay marriage and pornography; conservatives, the liberty unleashing that locust plague called unrestrained capitalism; neo-conservatives the license for lying, murderous Machtpolitik. Founding Fathers vs. Church Fathers
  • A strain of mutant mice groom compulsively till they seriously injure themselves.
  • They will drink their wretched heartless stuff, such as they call claret, or wine of Medoc, or Bordeaux, or what not, with no more meaning than sour rennet, stirred with the pulp from the cider press, and strained through the cap of our Betty. Lorna Doone
  • Immediate pressure on peasant living standards was relieved by the abolition of redemption dues and restraint of the tax burden.
  • The new scheme is designed to take the strain out of shopping.
  • Abdallah, and there is none in my day more magical than I; yet do I not make use of gramarye save upon constraint. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Paraneck Stable's former classic starter Griffinite has been retired due to a slight ligament strain in his left front leg.
  • The radical 500-day plan was very clear on how it intended to try to restrain inflation.
  • The events of the last few weeks have put a real strain on him.
  • Severe acne is usually treated with common antibiotics, but many strains are becoming resistant to these. Boing Boing: July 25, 2004 - July 31, 2004 Archives
  • I prefer a colander, which is also good for straining spagetti though one should remove it from your head first. Propeller Most Popular Stories
  • I must however caution that financial and other constraints compel us to plan more conservatively than I imagine you would wish.
  • Read the text naturally; don't strain after effects.
  • If some extractive natural subsector gets scarce we will just substitute other sectors for it and growth of the whole economy will continue, not into any restraining biospheric envelope, but into sidereal space presumably full of resource-bearing asteriods and friendly highly-evolved aliens eager to teach us how to grow forever into their territory. From a Failed Growth Economy to a Steady-State Economy
  • Two catalytic subunits of PP2A are encoded by two closely related genes, ppa1 + and ppa2 +, and strains in which both genes are disrupted are inviable.
  • An agreement to restrain wages on the part of the central labour federation might not extend to the population of non-union workers.
  • The three-layer system architecture of conflict detection based on fuzzy constraint network is put forward. A corresponding prototype is developed and its running process is described.
  • Even when talking in the most restrained of voices, Hugo's lilt would still rise up above all others.
  • Semi-structured interviews took place in a private room in the hospital ward, usually within 12 hours after each restraint event.
  • Already now in Australia we're isolating strains which have low level resistance to vancomycin.
  • He was addicted to a stronger strain of skunk cannabis but demand for it won't disappear if marijuana is legalised. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is skepticism about the impact and the unrestraint spending they're seeing out of this democratic Congress. CNN Transcript Jul 10, 2009
  • The government has placed tight constraints on spending this year.
  • He strove so hard to rival Holding that he strained stomach muscles in the Kingston Test against England in 1981.
  • Try relaxing the value of each bounded constraint one at a time, solve the modified problem, and see what happens to the optimal value of the objective function.
  • The component had been genetically engineered to produce a vaccine highly effective against all strains.
  • There are many adjectives routinely used to describe jazz fusion, but ‘restrained’ isn't one of them.
  • Fill a tumbler with more ice cubes and strain in the negroni. Times, Sunday Times
  • His dark hair was matted with sweat, his expression strained and empty, the expression of release. Strangers In the Night
  • We can use relational database theory to implement Dualistic constraint database.
  • She makes writing a book sound like busywork ... the strain is as palpable as the voice is cute, and the drama is virtually nonexistent. Committed by Elizabeth Gilbert: Book summary
  • Dogmatic constraints, tactical stereotypes, schematism in place of originality, and the boring repetition of truisms are contributing factors in creative infecundity.
  • Premium cable - that is, unsponsored channels you pay for separately - doesn't have those constraints and is free to show us conflicts untempered by political correctness.
  • There are major financial constraints on all schools.
  • Others are trying to develop new strains of guar that can be grown in different climatic conditions. Times, Sunday Times
  • But action filmmaking knows no restraint and so the plotline galumphs on to its inevitable conclusion.
  • However, the constraints of HTML and web browser technology prevent the reader from personalizing the files, although we have provided readers with a simple search engine, and some indexing and annotation.
  • The tone of his poetry is restrained and unemotional.
  • I barely restrained myself from hitting him.
  • This paper describes a case study of adaptation, constraint, and evolutionary innovation in pierid butterflies.
  • Strain the sauce and place in a small saucepan over a low heat to keep warm. Times, Sunday Times
  • He said neither of the stars wished to be seen by their public behaving in an unrestrained manner, which is what happens at events such as weddings.
  • But just think of your colleagues who will have to take the strain. Times, Sunday Times
  • Intense deforestation is constrained to the few roads that do exist or around urban centers such as Iquitos, Puerto Maldonado, and Rio Branco. Southwest Amazon moist forests
  • When the beans are cold he stirred in more fresh dill and enough strained Greek yoghurt to bind them into a soft dip.
  • The family dog Jasper, a brown spotted Dalmatian, strained at his lead as master and family passed by.
  • And on the fifteenth day, when that we had gotten up and washt and eat and drank, the Maid did look unto my bandages; and did consider that I be healed very good, if but that I not to overstrain my body. The Night Land
  • It is appropriate therefore to see the state and its actors as facing strategic choices within constraints.
  • The necessity of the case demands what you call a strained ideal. The Odd Women
  • A strain of bird flu has been detected on a turkey farm in Lincolnshire. Times, Sunday Times
  • This difficult-to-treat strain, called neurosyphilis, can cause blindness and stroke, and a CDC researcher said that it's spreading among this cohort because, although they're already HIV-positive, they are not using condoms. Gabriel Rotello: Deadly Error Alert: Andrew Sullivan's Latest AIDS Fantasy
  • The antiserums they stored in the banks that counteracted other forms of BHF were not working on this mutated strain, nor had ribavirin. MINUTES TO BURN
  • The straining bearers like a string quartet, taking the burden up in unison, at a nod from their leader?
  • Stress-strain results are reported for two series of smectic C main chain liquid crystalline elastomers IMechanica - Comments
  • Manichaean symbols and apocalyptic scenarios are bandied about with future consequences and rhetorical restraint thrown to the winds.
  • His legs were so thin however that Catherad was sure that they would snap under the enormous strain.
  • Private insurers are charged with implementing and administrating the elements of care that are funded out of the payroll tax, but those elements create a very tight, constrained sandbox for premium-driven short-term insurance to play in. Matthew Yglesias » What It’s All About
  • Flexible muscles are far less likely to be strained or pulled than tight ones.
  • But when restraints to which he had long been accustomed and to which he yielded passive obedience were removed, and he was left in a condition of license, all the abeyant passions of his undisciplined nature were brought into prominence and antagonism with an environment where reciprocal obligations have not always found their highest expression. The American Negro: What He Was, What He Is, and What He May Become: A Critical and Practical Discussion
  • There was just that constant tiny worried frown between her brows to show the strain.
  • Agrobacteria gene movements have produced second chromosomes derived from plasmids, while in the biovar II strain K84 the plasmid-based replicon has yet to reach second chromosome status. Health News from Medical News Today
  • Pretty good, Miss Green, the advisor called out with her usual restraint, hands on the hips of her gray sweats, her expression thoughtful A compact woman with frizzy brown hair and a somewhat plain face, Miss Green had a husky voice that always sounded as if she had laryngitis. The Second Evil
  • Carling strained a thigh muscle in Dunedin and Bayfield ended that match on a stretcher with a neck seizure.
  • The frequency spectral analyses show that the second ignition method could weaken and restrain the high frequency vibration, improve the characteristic of vibration in high loading density charge.
  • I know you guys are expecting something in my usual strain of strange humour.
  • You also have to specify column types in a relational system, so you might find yourself constrained by, say, the length of the address field.
  • The colorful scenes tend to be counterbalanced by some dark and foreboding sets, and many shots feature subdued lighting that tends to strain shadow detail.
  • My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear to others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced and the immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began to think of it myself as very hazarded. David Balfour, a sequel to Kidnapped.
  • And we would feel constrained to confess ourselves poor diagnosticians if George Bernard Shaw, the enfant terrible of nimble wit in contemporaneous literature, succeeded in disproving the existence in himself of the same strain of blood as coursed in the veins of Heinrich Heine. The Social Disability of the Jew
  • Quantitative growth ring analysis of fossil woods may be used only in well-constrained paleoecological studies where taxonomic and climatic sources of variability can be controlled, and additionally, of course, as a qualitative tool in paleoclimatic and paleoecological analyses. Supplementary Comments to NAS Panel « Climate Audit
  • It is widely taken that the maximum value of the voltage transfer ratio of AC-AC matrix converter is 0.866, which has considerably restrained its application breadth.
  • I usually strain the juice off the pineapple and use it in another recipe.
  • They were also usually, if not always, a restraining influence on the more abrasive, if not irrepressible side of Mercer.
  • The strain of a violent ground campaign will exact a toll on troops.
  • Crown gall strains caused by Agrobacterium tumefaciens S-1 702, C-58 have been established from sunflower hypocotyls, tobacco stems and stem pithes, carrot roots and potato tubers.
  • Strain at a gnat and swallow a camel.
  • I sat on the bed shivering, straining to hear their conversation, but they were too far down the hall and speaking too softly anyway.
  • They were restrained before being taken under arrest to St Aldate's Police station.
  • Those two pilots physically wrestled the plane down with all four legs straining at the brakes. Times, Sunday Times
  • While monetary policy is relatively easy to understand, with macroprudential policy no one knows how big these capital surcharges will have to be to restrain "overexuberance". Belfasttelegraph.co.uk - Frontpage RSS Feed
  • The House of Lords applied the restraint of trade doctrine.
  • June 2, 2010 at 11:59 am taht bee bery strainge! maibee u cud emayo meh pleez tew put ur skreen naim in teh subjekt baux sew ai kno itz nawt spam spam spam spam. wispurrs…. itz mai skreen naim at yahoo.com CHEAP DISHWASHER - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • We mutagenized a wild-type strain and sought animals that were defective in cultivation-temperature avoidance.
  • The romantic backdrop of mist-shrouded mountains and ancient temples in the southeast town of Kyongju only highlighted the strain between the two.
  • Their constant arguments were putting a strain on their marriage.
  • better sanitation in Haiti, to "minimise the spread of the new south Asian strain, and the virulence genes it carries, beyond the shores of this Caribbean island".
  • But their conduct was equally constrained by codes - a mixture of religious strictures and the social cant that went with it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The highest GOX expression levels (1552 units of secreted protein per gram dry cell weight) were achieved with the strain K. marxianus CBS 6556, using an episomal system in which the INU1 promoter and terminator were used to drive heterologous gene expression, together with the INU1 prepro sequence, which was employed to drive secretion of the enzyme. BioMed Central - Latest articles
  • She wrapped herself around him like a clam in formation, her body one big muscle, straining.
  • When you're ready to start cooking, strain the beef, reserving the marinade and the other ingredients.
  • But more significant, he adds, is that the royal family is being required to cement the political and symbolic unity of a United Kingdom when that unity is under unprecedented strain.
  • Oborne regrets the 'loss of self restraint' and his intention is to recreate it, or rather to again 'ostracise' and 'thrust beyond the outer margins of debate' those who dare to speak out about the impact of Islam on the British way of life. The British National Party
  • Stevie shut his eyes tight, restraining himself, trying to hold his anticipation in check.
  • Clinical Relevance The olecranon is a key osseous constraint of the elbow.
  • Of these often-untrained teens, 200,000 are injured every year through slips, falls, strains and burns.
  • But these were difficult times and a lesser man would have buckled under the strain.
  • One particular strain lives only in the San Francisco Bay Area and gives the sourdough bread from that region its distinctive taste.
  • The coconut is grated, strained and boiled to extract its oil.
  • But there was the usual reverent silence, broken by the occasional embarrassed cough or ripple of restrained applause.
  • Shake with ice and strain into stemmed glasses. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a terrible strain on me to keep her at school, ma'am, and again and _again_ I've thought I couldn't stand it, what with her being in the shop only in the afternoon, and the washing, and trying to keep her clothes always nice; though she's been as good as Lippincott's Magazine, October 1885
  • This structure enables the high extensibility of elastic fibers to be exploited but protects them from damage at high strains.
  • A sieve is like a strainer that you drain spaghetti through when it is done cooking.
  • We will continue to exert our best efforts to secure the liquidity and safety of our reserves holdings, while enhancing returns under the given constraints. Times, Sunday Times
  • Shake and double strain over cubed ice. Times, Sunday Times
  • Children must use an approved child restraint or adult seat belt.
  • The film plays like a classical symphony on the withering of age and the resilience of a couple's love under growing strain. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sleeve restrains the grout flow and expands up to twice its previous diameter, molding itself in the shapes and spaces within the walls.
  • It was just a tagboard cutout, and the original was locked away under a rune of constraint that would hold, she hoped, forever. THE FORBIDDEN GAME
  • Were your brain appreciably larger, large enough to put the strain on your Princess Grace neck that your loppy preaxial digits put upon your wrists, you conceivably would possess a superior intellect. Even Cowgirls Get The Blues
  • Children may in turn be reinfected with different strains of the virus.
  • Meantime, the build-up to D-Day went on, and the strain of waiting began to tell.
  • But the calm and restrained people constitute the majority of the marchers.
  • When Rostnikov repeated that the primary evidence against Samsonov was the testimony of an Evenk shaman, Samsonov had to be restrained by Famfanoff who, surprisingly, found enough strength within his abused body to control the furious doctor. A Cold Red Sunrise
  • It's a surprisingly tractable companion, especially if you let the auto function take the strain of stop-starting in the city.
  • The milk is then strained and the grains recovered for reuse.
  • It appears that the strain on his body was too much, and that restricting himself to one day games was all he had the strength and fitness to do.
  • Even more fundamental than these pragmatic constraints, however, is the educational philosophy underlying the two initiatives.
  • Though not slapstick or of the knee-slapping variety, Hamer is droll and often wickedly subtle in his deadly strain of humour.
  • This paper discusses multiple objective parameter optimization under a certain constraint condition through genetic algorithm.
  • New viral strains arise through a process called antigenic shift, or reassortment, when at least two viruses combine. Scientists Fear People Spread New Swine Flu
  • Now, of course, the judges/justices can try to distinguish precedent, etc. but that doesn't eliminate the fact that stare decisis has some inherent value in constraining judicial decisionmaking. Balkinization
  • In the second generation this movement back and forth produced a fair amount of strain.
  • In other words, I am neither an anarchist who wants no government, namely unrestrained devitalization, nor a socialist, whose cry is for all government -- that is, restriction and rigidity. Piano Mastery Talks with Master Pianists and Teachers
  • From infancy through early adolescence, Semai children are largely unconstrained and free of external domination.
  • I thought I had simply overstrained myself during an exercise and that it would go away after a few days.
  • Therefore, increasing premiums for wealthier seniors is more likely to restrain overutilization than hiking their ... common sense Medicare reforms, like income-adjusted premiums ...will help ensure patients are seeking appropriate care. Richard (RJ) Eskow: The Burr/Coburn Medicare Plan: 10 Deceptions - And A Free-Market "Death Panel"
  • And what about her emotional strain upon being ditched?
  • But would these sprightly veterans have been better advised to avoid the stresses and strains of full-time toil in old age?
  • O'Connor noted that the norovirus has many different strains, making it difficult for a person to develop long-lasting immunity to the infection.
  • I was aware of a certain constraint on their part when they were in my presence.
  • I think it would be unrealistic if I quickly tried to make them friends within the time restraints of this story.
  • The strain of covering the duties of the other menservants who had left to fight had taken its toll. The Sun
  • Whereas ITV News - with their love of the clunkiest graphics, doom-laden links and love of the dropped intro 'It was ...' - seems to make The Day Today look sober and restrained ... Back to you in the Studio Fiona. Cluck Cluck.
  • I'll have keep my records brief so I don't overstrain my poor hand.
  • But a harsh strain of winter flu had roared in, opening up opportunities. Times, Sunday Times
  • She strained her ears, but all she heard was the chirping of the birds and the buzzing song of the grasshoppers. A SHRINE OF MURDERS
  • Many marriages today are experiencing severe strain but that does not mean that the only solution is to eventually put an end to it by resorting to divorce.
  • Because of the universals I see, I'm much more interested in sociobiology, though -- the sense that evolution has formed our minds and thereby, in deep and powerful ways, constrained the types and shapes possible in human societies. EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Gord Sellar
  • This expected slowdown appears to be largely due to mounting affordability pressures, which have increasingly constrained housing demand. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Hamiltonian constraint NH = 0 defines a diffeomorphism structure on spatial manifolds by the lapse function N, but this is not identical to time. Einstein Still Rules, Says Fermi Telescope Team | Universe Today
  • She tried to appear friendly, but her constraint was obvious.
  • One could argue that McNamara is exhibit A in my case against what Thomas Sowell would call the unconstrained vision, which holds that certain people have so much knowledge and moral strength that they should be given great power over the rest. Robert McNamara , Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The difference will be exacerbated because birds, the most well-represented endotherms in the analysis, demonstrate constrained phenological plasticity due to photoperiodic induction of gonad maturation and migration, especially for long-distance migrants. The Guardian World News
  • Nonnie, my host mom, helps me squish all the honey cells through a strainer, which is great fun. In the direction of my daydreams
  • Then if you can inform and entertain the reader at the same time - without straining a muscle - all the better.
  • The Prime Minister is calling for new restraints on trade unions.
  • ETC3 allows its users to select the parameters for the composition of some random poetry, based upon the “styles” of other poets, whereupon the software goes on to create a text that conforms to these preassigned constraints (be they in the form of a chosen subject, a chosen grammar, a chosen lexicon, etc.). Poetic Machines 07 : Christian Bök : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
  • Boys undergo no period of constraint, in contrast to their lot among the Shavante.
  • But the analogy to the price system is badly strained.
  • In any case, the idea that variation is constrained by history is intrinsic to evolution, variations being modifications of what already exists in the line. A Disclaimer for Behe?
  • One strain produced a cytopathic effect consisting of vacuolation.
  • In retrospect, it appears we required a developed and reflexive feminist, gay and transgendered global vision to see through the prejudice governing sexuality, gender, ethnicity and the legislative restraints that paternally impose on enculturation and self-identification. G. Roger Denson: Gender as Performance & Script: Reading the Art of Yvonne Rainer, Cindy Sherman, Sarah Charlesworth & Lorna Simpson After Eve Sedgwick & Judith Butler
  • A squat, bull-necked man approached, his dark suit straining at the seams. AMAGANSETT
  • The steel frames began to buckle under the strain.
  • The legal teams shuttle back and forth between the contending parties on a settlement quest which may save the horrendous costs of a High Court hearing and the strain of a two year waiting period for a listing.
  • The wound opened under the strain and blood oozed out.
  • Strain and add infused liquid to the fumet.
  • And even while operating under that constraint, Clinton proposed to expand Medicaid coverage to some 5 million uninsured children.
  • Close by the stir of the great city, with all its fret and chafe and storm of life, in the desolate garden of that sombre house, and under the withering eyes of relentless Crime, revived the Arcady of old, -- the scene vocal to the reeds of idyllist and shepherd; and in the midst of the iron Tragedy, harmlessly and unconsciously arose the strain of the Pastoral Music. Lucretia — Complete
  • Until we embrace this belief our culture has little hope of surviving beyond its present state of unrestrained hostility.
  • His conception of a restrained aristocratic manliness is as applicable to the potentially hubristic - or tyrannical - prince as it is to the courtier.

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