Arch-enemy Sentence Examples

arch-enemy
  • But Hajji Ibrahim had been intriguing against his sovereign, to whose family he owed everything, not only with his officers and soldiers but also with Aga Mahommed, the chief of the Kajars, and arch-enemy of the Zends.

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  • Paul being thus identified with Simon, it was argued that Simon's visit to Rome had no other basis than Paul's presence there, and, further, that the tradition of Peter's residence in Rome rests on the assumed necessity of his resisting the arch-enemy of Judaism there as elsewhere.

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  • Chmielnicki was now regarded not merely as a Cossack rebel, but as the arch-enemy of Catholicism in eastern Europe, and the pope granted a plenary absolution to all who took up arms against him.

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  • Meanwhile Averroism had come to be regarded by the great Dominican school as the arch-enemy of the truth.

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  • Ned goes to take care of the bounty while Colton is left to trade some Old West trash talk to an arch-enemy of Ned's.

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  • On your quest to save the world, you will also encounter arch-enemy reporters.

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  • Roman Brady spent years in captivity to arch-enemy Stefano DiMera.

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  • Meru became advisor to Gul Dukat, one of the leaders of the resistance and later Nerys' arch enemy.

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  • The failure of Jaureguy did not deter a young Catholic zealot, by name Balthazar Gerard, from attempting to assassinate the man whom he looked upon as the arch-enemy of God and the king.

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  • As for the allusions, more or less indirect, to St Paul behind the figure of Simon, as the arch-enemy of the truth - allusions which first directed attention to the Clementines in the last century - there can be no doubt as to their presence, but only as to their origin and the degree to which they are so meant in Homilies and Recognitions.

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  • Unfortunately, you may also develop an arch-enemy.

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  • For the moment the king and his ministers were placed in a position of the greatest anxiety, for they knew the resources of France and the boundless versatility of their arch-enemy far too well to imagine that the end of their sufferings was yet in sight.

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  • Friendly relations were at the outset established with the Indians, and the province never had much trouble with that race; but with William Claiborne (1589?-1676?), the arch-enemy of the province as long as he lived, it was otherwise.

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