He tends to have an unsettling effect on younger members of the force, who may be a mite intimidated by the longevity of his career. |
|
Clear-sightedness is only possible when one is not distracted by jargon, and psycho-babble or intimidated by emotional blackmail. |
|
In my last week I was intimidated by drug users, ordered around like a lackey, and threatened. |
|
Not one to be intimidated by exotic foods, she bravely dove in and was surprised to find she actually kind of liked it. |
|
With so many details to remember, it is understandable that many birders are intimidated by this accipitrine affinity. |
|
By this time, Sicilians were acclimated to the extent that they no longer felt threatened or intimidated by American schools. |
|
To say that shoppers feel intimidated by them is a slur on their characters. |
|
His age means he won't step into a huddle and be intimidated by older teammates. |
|
They were playing like men possessed and there was no question of this Charlton side being intimidated by United. |
|
Robbers openly brandished weapons as they intimidated marketers and stole goods and money. |
|
They have vandalised property, strewn litter and intimidated staff and residents. |
|
Kids who were initially intimidated by the thought of sewing soon came to realize how fun and fulfilling quilting together could be. |
|
Not only was she intimidated by the managers, she also alleges they bullied other staff members who wanted to join the union. |
|
Nobody should be intimidated from making a stand against nuclear weapons and war. |
|
Workers claim that they have been harassed and intimidated after complaining about working conditions and raising the issue of unionization. |
|
This leaves thinking people intimidated and in despair for the decencies they revere. |
|
I actually got intimidated by the amount of sugar used, so cut some down in the cake and buttercream. |
|
A little intimidated, I rang, and on hearing a buzz, went up the carpeted stairs. |
|
To be honest the school itself intimidated her, with its stainless reputation, wealthy attendants, and so to speak beautiful people. |
|
If for no other reason, many scholars may have been intimidated by a historiography written largely in Dutch. |
|
|
He is not intimidated by pressure, and the club is trying to take advantage of that as much as possible. |
|
Rossiter refused to be intimidated and met Bradley's level gaze, steady in his resolve. |
|
I wasn't intimidated at all, I think because he's so warm and affable and such a generous actor. |
|
She was a loud, rebellious, outspoken and opinionated person who often intimidated her colleagues. |
|
He has strong-armed the media, intimidated opponents and sanctioned massive extrajudicial killings of supposed drug dealers. |
|
Witnesses in criminal proceedings against these people are being intimidated, so they do not make any statements or withdraw those already made. |
|
You no longer have to settle with existing designs, or be intimidated by the workload of redesigning your sites. |
|
Are you intimidated by such terms as Download, Hyperlink, Online, Homepage, World Wide Web? |
|
A gang of six teenagers intimidated him and his friends before demanding his mobile phone. |
|
With Will it's so easy not to feel intimidated because he puts you at ease. |
|
He likes the freewheeling atmosphere and the fact that people aren't intimidated by law enforcement agencies. |
|
Ho showed few signs of being intimidated by links golf, particularly during his annihilation of the 497-yard par-five 4th. |
|
They cower in fear and are thus powerless, because somebody who feels fear is easily controlled, intimidated and subjugated. |
|
They were a very strange folk, with a riddling dialect that made even Levee, no stranger to the art of persuasion, feel intimidated. |
|
Most of the men seem to be intimidated by her, or at least, contemptuous of her because she's disingenuous. |
|
They think we are weak, cowardly people who will be intimidated and scared off by their mistreatment of our prisoners. |
|
I was too little to understand what had happened and too intimidated to argue with the teacher. |
|
Members of the public said they had been scared and felt intimidated because of the large numbers of youths congregating near their homes. |
|
What has happened to the player whose very presence intimidated those around him? |
|
There may be room for the assertion that the bailiff was not tactful and that his firmness and size intimidated those in that room. |
|
|
Brooke replied, a little quieter than before, as if being intimidated by his sudden firm and maddened notion. |
|
Ursula stood cold and erect, her high cheekbones giving her a look of dignity that I'm sure had intimidated many a saucy cook's apprentice. |
|
Nor will we be intimidated into backing down from something we believe in very strongly. |
|
It was claimed that voters had been threatened and intimidated into giving away their postal ballot papers. |
|
I am not one easily scared or intimidated and neither was my husband but as time went on the situation became intolerable. |
|
It was odd how dressing unusually could cause people to feel scared and intimidated of you. |
|
It actually slightly intimidated me in return, which I guess was the point. |
|
At the same time local industrialists and producers were harassed and intimidated. |
|
Although he was quite intimidated by her appearance, the butler gathered up all of his nerve to speak to her. |
|
A proper inquiry became almost impossible, and she was intimidated, at work and outside. |
|
Oh I forgot, the nice man intimidated her into signing the car documents over to him. |
|
Other students recall that it was when she improved physically that she perfected a glacial superiority that intimidated some of them. |
|
She is initially intimidated and appalled, but eventually conquers her fear to partake, indeed to star, in the jock beanfeast. |
|
The interdict meant if either of the two intimidated Souter, or incited anyone else to bully her, they would be arrested. |
|
Maybe I was too intimidated to help out, or maybe I was still trying to digest it all. |
|
But the man had been intimidated in the same way as the rest of the room had, until I had come and freed them from the witch's curse. |
|
Many people feel intimidated by overt and perceived misbehaviour in public spaces. |
|
The average golfer can be intimidated when the ball is bunkered. |
|
First, the cheap shot threats that might have intimidated other victims and their lawyers don't faze me. |
|
Group Four security staff were threatened and intimidated as gangs of detainees, some of them sporting home-made masks rampaged through the complex, the court was told. |
|
|
They also feel intimidated by all the technology that purveyors of conventional wisdom claim patients are demanding. |
|
The territory's federal justices, plainly intimidated, took no steps to indict anyone for the killings, and Hosmer went so far as to renew his praise of the vigilantes. |
|
It's a very competitive market out there and I think that artists have to be aware of what they are letting themselves in for and not to be intimidated by it. |
|
He has intimidated and humiliated the fledgling pro-European government in Kiev. |
|
The average male is intimidated by my intelligence and strength of personality, and backs off, but I'm not interested in the average male, after all. |
|
I'd read in a book once of people who were less intimidated by bankers who wore regular clothes and made house calls, even though they were scamming their clients. |
|
Hirsch has noticed that sometimes parents get intimidated and brushed aside, but it is their right to intercede. |
|
Is it possible that Sclove felt pressured or intimidated in ways Kopin did not notice or understand? |
|
Mendoza then approached Colombian contractors, but they were far too intimidated by the ever-present menace of Escobar. |
|
The press is heavily controlled and intimidated into self-censorship. |
|
Do not be intimidated by his seniority or his future in-law status. |
|
We learned that the golden names of Motown were honestly intimidated by Michael Jackson when it became his turn. |
|
I was motoring along, a little intimidated by the evil eye I was getting from taxi drivers, when the bus in front of me stopped to pick up passengers. |
|
Most of the reasons for this he attributes to staff officers whom the secretary may have intimidated into unchallenging compliance with his broader views. |
|
Witnesses have been intimidated and the police have proved uncooperative. |
|
While the appellant testified the complainant had been snuffling, she testified she was crying because he had intimidated her to the point of exhaustion, frustration and fear. |
|
If those in government allow themselves to be intimidated into neutrality because they harbour private peccadilloes, they will sell the pass to the prophets of moral nihilism. |
|
Joe spiffs himself up and heads with Pip to Miss Havisham's, where he is so intimidated by the old woman that every time she asks him a question, he directs his reply at Pip. |
|
To give him his due, the counter clerk refused to be intimidated. |
|
Brass saw her as a spitfire who wouldn't be intimidated by the big brains of Thacker, Lampson, and Keely, or be cowed by pen computing's checkered history. |
|
|
But instead of their perpetrators being punished, the victims were intimidated, isolated, and retaliated against. |
|
Windows have been smashed, paving pulled up, shop staff intimidated and telephone boxes destroyed as yobs caused havoc in the Thornhill area of the city. |
|
For people intimidated by new technology, even this process is a cinch! |
|
Just as my fellow students were intimidated by formal grammar, a lot of otherwise sophisticated people are intimidated by spirits, cocktails and mixed drinks. |
|
There was no evidence that the doorman had conspired to pervert the course of justice, and no one had intimidated witnesses to the violent incident, he said. |
|
When was the last time you felt intimidated on a football pitch? |
|
As a body, our platoon sergeants and first sergeants are so talented, proficient and self-confident that, more than ever, new lieutenants can be intimidated. |
|
A tiny ring boy, who seemed a little intimidated by all the people watching him, hurried right behind the flower girl, seeming unable to get to the front soon enough. |
|
Our State and Federal Governments, intimidated by the medical fraternity's recent show of muscle, have scuttled new liability legislation through their parliaments post-haste. |
|
You have been intimidated by their moralising self-righteousness, brow-beaten by their puritanical spartanism, seduced by their appointment-diary ethics. |
|
The youths used threatening behaviour, caused damage to vehicles, threw missiles at neighbours' property, verbally abused and intimidated neighbours and graffitied the area. |
|
Engle says that when she filed a grievance, DWP managers denied her overtime pay, hassled her about the dress code and intimidated her by hovering around her workstation. |
|
Don't let yourself be intimidated, just watch them scarper as you take the cab number and dial police. |
|
Pompey filled the city with soldiers, a move which intimidated the triumvirate's opponents. |
|
She intimidated me so much that I could hardly get out a coherent sentence in her presence. |
|
Many have alleged that women often feel intimidated by the pervasively male-dominated culture surrounding programming and technology. |
|
Far from being intimidated, the colonists formed new associations to boycott British goods. |
|
A very suggestible age and he was likely encouraged and perhaps intimidated to carry out his action by elders, who frankly should be ashamed. |
|
In societies in which clitoridectomies are performed, men are more intimidated by women who do enjoy their body and their sexuality. |
|
Readers shouldn't be intimidated by the lofty concepts or multisyllabic genetics jargon, though. |
|
|
Violent gangs of the urban unemployed, controlled by rival Senators, intimidated the electorate through violence. |
|
Trudeau claimed the FTC had intimidated him into leaving the cures out. |
|
He is intimidated by Nikki's success and will not attend any work functions with her. |
|
Improbably, in the Himalayas, brown bears are reportedly intimidated by Asian black bears in confrontations. |
|
Although the impact upon armoured vehicles was less than expected, air activity intimidated these units and cut their supplies. |
|
For the immediate future James had to hold his own, something Louis expected him to be quite capable of, especially if the Dutch were intimidated. |
|
When I embarked on reading it, I was intimidated by how much of our popular culture Martha Bayles proposed to cover in detail by focusing on so many individual products. |
|
England certainly made a mockery of the claim that they might somehow be intimidated by the Glasgow din. Celtic Park was a loud, seething pit of bias. |
|
Some trails are extremely narrow, and people might become easily intimidated by passing an unleashed dog in a confined space, especially a large, nosy dog. |
|
In R v Hudson and Taylor 1971 2 QB 202, two young women who had witnessed a serious assault were intimidated and refused to identify the attacker in court. |
|
When he came, the Spanish soldiers appeared scared and intimidated. |
|
In many places the Patriots were energetic and were backed by angry mobs while the Loyalists were too intimidated or poorly organized to be effective without the British army. |
|
However intimidated my students feel anticipating our study of a hypertext novel, it takes no more than a little description of what we'll engage to make them comfortable. |
|
A series of Norman victories along the route cut the city's supply lines and in December 1066, isolated and intimidated, its leaders yielded London without a fight. |
|