Citations:cut and thrust


 * 1988, Robert I. Rotberg, The Founder: Cecil Rhodes and the Pursuit of Power, Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199879205, page 349
 * For him, a sense of accomplishment came not from the cut and thrust of clever words, but from didactic, expansive, and thoroughly repetitive articulation.
 * 2000, Robert M. Collins, More: The Politics of Economic Growth in Postwar America, Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198021520, page 179
 * The rise of a number of new theoretical insights emerging from the routine cut and thrust of intellectual life,
 * 2001, David Winter, Winter's Tale: Living Through an Age of Change in Church and Media, Lion Books ISBN 9780745950006, page 120
 * I was happy doing what I was goot at, which was producing programmes, and not very sure that the cut and thrust of BBC management was quite my forte.
 * 2003, Mun Cheong Yong, The Indonesian Revolution and the Singapore Connection, 1945-1949, NUS Press ISBN 9789971692766, page 67
 * However, in the cut and thrust of disputes and acrimonious arguments among the Indonesians in Singapore, it was difficult to deny that the competing groups were also concerned about the immeasurable benefits of being recognized as the most representative of Republican interests in Singapore.
 * 2005, Thomas Reilly, Jan Cabri, Duarte Araújo, Science and Football V: The Proceedings of the Fifth World Congress on Sports Science and Football, Routledge ISBN 9781134317356, page 256
 * Bass (1981) identified that there are two playing styles in Rugby sevens; the results suggest that successful teams tended to play a 'cat and mouse' style and that unsuccessful teams tended to play a &#39;cut and thrust&#39; style.
 * 2006, Ellie Chambers, Marshall Gregory, Teaching and Learning English Literature, SAGE ISBN 9781847877239, page 180
 * in order to establish fruitful interpersonal relationships with and among the students; in the second-year class, where 'the language is held more in common', there was much more ideational cut and thrust.
 * 2008, Wayne Errington, Peter Van Onselen, John Winston Howard: The Definitive Biography, Melbourne Univ. Publishing ISBN 9780522855227, page 242
 * Howard asked him to think it over, citing Baume's age, over sixty-five, as a reason to move on from the cut and thrust of politics.
 * 2009, Brian Lumley, Necroscope: Harry and the Pirates: and Other Tales from the Lost Years, Macmillan ISBN 9781429958981, page 120
 * But in the cut and thrust of things: well, it happens I was there! And never a plastic sword to mention, and damn jew crushed tomatoes — er, ketchup? — either!
 * 2010, Ben Macintyre, Operation Mincemeat: The True Spy Story that Changed the Course of World War II, Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408808542
 * He relished the cut and thrust of the courtroom, where victory depended on being able to 'see the point of view, and anticipate the reactions, of an equally astute opposing counsel'.
 * 2010, Lynne Graham, Ruthless Magnate, Convenient Wife, Mills &amp; Boon ISBN 9781408918470
 * He was a loner, he always had been, and he found personal relationships a challenge. He loved the cut and thrust of business, the exhilaration of a new deal or takeover, the challenge of cutting out the dead wood and increasing profit