View example sentences and word forms for Hatreds.

Hatreds

Hatreds | Hatred

Hatreds meaning

plural of hatred

Example sentences (16)

Both seek to defend racial hatreds in their attacks on higher education.

There are no easy solutions to this problem except for holding bigoted academics and their equally bigoted students responsible for their hatreds.

Tomino carefully lays out the reasoning behind Char and Amuro’s passions and hatreds, not allowing the viewer to choose a clear side.

What I mean is instead of fully integrating into Canadian society the flawed interpretation of " multiculturalism" makes that remain more connected to their past country, old cultural hatreds and bias than living like Canadians.

In any case, the clash between Croats and Serbs in the 1990s had nothing to do with ancient hatreds.

On the stump, he quite purposefully stokes up his audiences with racial slurs, providing powerful permission for his followers to echo his hatreds.

Time and again, communal hatreds overrun the newsfeed—the primary portal for news and information for many users—unchecked as local media are displaced by Facebook and governments find themselves with little leverage over the company.

We cannot only battle the hatreds, even the anti-Semitic acts or acts of terrorism.

Alternatively, elapsed time may represent the gradual process of healing of old hatreds.

Films must be made to say these things, to counteract the violence and the meanness, to buy time to demobilize the hatreds.

If these "ancient hatreds" are always simmering under the surface and are at the forefront of people's consciousness, then we should see ethnic groups constantly ensnared in violence.

She discusses how Satan becomes a figure that reflects our own hatreds and prejudices, and the struggle between our loving selves and our fearful, combative selves.

Such awareness will placate the mutual hatreds.

The works that come forth from it – such as adulteries, fornications, thefts, hatreds, murders, carousings – he accordingly calls "fruits of sin" (Gal 5:19–21), although they are also commonly called "sins" in Scripture, and even by Paul himself.

They cannot help other nations by bringing old world race prejudices and race hatreds into action here.

With its passing partisan hatreds and newspaper feuds on the decline, the nation entered the " Era of Good Feelings ", marked by the absence of all but one political party.