- Armed or violent opposition - Best feature, pièce de ... - immobility - Opposing force - Underground movement shows immunity to disease - The act of resisting; opposition, passive or active. - The quality of not yielding to force or external
pressure; that power of a body which acts in opposition to the impulse
or pressure of another, or which prevents the effect of another power;
as, the resistance of the air to a body passing through it; the
resistance of a target to projectiles.
- Convene, my hidden foe! - Foe - Hostile force from Yemen - Hostile opponent - Intervene! Myanmar is sheltering hostile power - Many men easily hold back foe - Opposing army
- Battle - Fight against - Fight, conflict - Join battle with - To struggle or contend, as with an opposing force; to
fight. - To fight with; to oppose by force, argument, etc.; to
contend against; to resist. - A fight; a contest of violence; a struggle for supremacy.
- Coerce - Compelling force - Exertion of force - Feeling of stressful urgency - Forceful coercion - The act of pressing, or the condition of being pressed;
compression; a squeezing; a crushing; as, a pressure of the hand. - A contrasting force or impulse of any kind; as, the
pressure of poverty; the pressure of taxes; the pressure of motives on
the mind; the pressure of civilization.
- Appointed lot - Destiny - Doom - Karma - power or influence that predetermines events - A fixed decree by which the order of things is prescribed;
the immutable law of the universe; inevitable necessity; the force by
which all existence is determined and conditioned. - Appointed lot; allotted life; arranged or predetermined
event; destiny; especially, the final lot; doom; ruin; death.
- The act of polarizing; the state of being polarized,
or of having polarity. - A peculiar affection or condition of the rays of
light or heat, in consequence of which they exhibit different
properties in different directions. - An effect produced upon the plates of a voltaic
battery, or the electrodes in an electrolytic cell, by the deposition
upon them of the gases liberated by the action of the current. It is
chiefly due to the hydrogen, and results in an increase of the
resistance, and the setting up of an opposing electro-motive force,
both of which tend materially to weaken the current of the battery, or
that passing through the cell.