brutal造句

Some people feel that American football is a brutal sport.

If low-minded, brutal people will act like themselves, what am I to do?

Everyone says the next month is going to be brutal for Clinton.

But the "brutal truth" is that we invest more per pupil than any other country save Luxembourg, and we are broke.

The incident exposes the unsatisfactory status of Koreans in Japan as descendants of those brought over, often forcibly, during Japan’s brutal colonisation of the Korean peninsula.

Itis only recently, after all, that the personal testimony of victimsof the even longer-lasting and more brutal conflict in south Sudanhas begun to emerge, with the help of Western writers.

A brutal, crude, or insensitive person.

Sometimes what a good friend needs from you is brutal honesty, not a cheerleader.

The Nixon Administration was not so insensitive to the Chilean junta's clumsy and occasionally brutal practices as our critics alleged.

The Kremlin might have expected a brutal dispersal of the crowd, but Mr Kuchma would not sanction the use of force.

To his delight and relief the dentist's touch was, if not quite as light as thistledown, at least sensitive, and certainly far from the brutal assault he had feared.

This is the result of a brutal murder.

And of course there's the also the idea that everyone working on a Sunday morning has a brutal hangover.

Social media users who denounce drug cartel activities along the Mexican border received a brutal warning this week: Two mangled bodies hanging like cuts of meat from a pedestrian bridge.

The people all over the world are opposed to the brutal colonial rule.

The President's amtition to stand taller in the world faces on significant U. S. made handicap: brutal cutbacks in finding American foreigh policy.

He recalls confrontations, additional interrogations in the middle of the night, and brutal beatings.

brutal造句

They aptly learn how to employ brutal tactics.

There are countless business stories where a failure to confront brutal facts has resulted in lost market dominance, bankruptcy, and other reversals of fortune.

Although not unlike Holden Caulfield's lonesome voice in J.D. Salinger's "the Catcher in the Rye", Mr Hou's narrative is a more brutal depiction of the spiritual vacuum of Taiwanese youth.