Betekenis van:
hostility
hostility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- vijandige daad
- violent action that is hostile and usually unprovoked
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
hostility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- bedreiging of aantasting met geweld
- violent action that is hostile and usually unprovoked
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
hostility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- toestand van vijand te zijn
- a state of deep-seated ill-will
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
hostility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- a hostile (very unfriendly) disposition
"he could not conceal his hostility"
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
hostility
Zelfstandig naamwoord
- the feeling of a hostile person
"he could no longer contain his hostility"
Synoniemen
Hyperoniemen
Hyponiemen
Voorbeeldzinnen
- Hostility was replaced by love.
- I have no personal hostility to the system.
- encourage a spirit of tolerance vis-à-vis the Serb and Roma minorities and take measures to protect persons belonging to minorities who may be subject to threats or acts of discrimination, hostility or violence,
- Reasons have to be based on clear grounds such as direct scientific rivalry, professional hostility, or similar situation which would impair or put in doubt the objectivity of the potential evaluator.
- Council of State, 16 November 1998, Sille: ‘First, having regard to the fact, as the judges in the court of first instance decided, whether the public authorities can be held liable, even without fault, on the grounds of the principle of the equality of citizens before public burdens, where a measure lawfully adopted has the effect of causing a special loss of a certain degree of gravity to a natural or legal person, that does not hold true in this case because Mr Sille, in his capacity as a real-estate professional, could not be unaware of the risks necessarily involved in the execution of a building project such as that planned in this case, in respect of which it was necessary, in particular, to amend the provisions of the land-use plan and obtain the agreement of the local council that Mr Sille should have contemplated the possibility or, faced with the negative findings of the public enquiry and the hostility encountered by the project, that it would be dropped by the local authority; that having taken on the risk in full knowledge of the facts, he cannot usefully maintain that he has suffered an abnormal loss and that the local authority must bear the substantial consequences for him arising from the shelving of the project’.