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War   /wɔr/   Listen
War

noun
1.
The waging of armed conflict against an enemy.  Synonym: warfare.
2.
A legal state created by a declaration of war and ended by official declaration during which the international rules of war apply.  Synonym: state of war.
3.
An active struggle between competing entities.  Synonym: warfare.  "A war of wits" , "Diplomatic warfare"
4.
A concerted campaign to end something that is injurious.  "The war against crime"
verb
(past & past part. warred; pres. part. warring)
1.
Make or wage war.



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"War" Quotes from Famous Books



... the border region, where the war was breaking ground, with all its dull, gross reality of horrors, to which the farther South and North were strangers; the broken talk in the cars was even more terrifying to her, because half understood,—of quiet farmers murdered in cold blood, of pillaging and outrage, of anticipated ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 93, July, 1865 • Various

... with the characters, events, and, so to speak, with the very physiognomy of a period ante Agamemnona; before the brilliant age of matured chivalry, which has given to song and romance the deeds of the later knighthood, and the glorious frenzy of the Crusades. The Norman Conquest was our Trojan War; an epoch beyond which our learning seldom induces our imagination ...
— Harold, Complete - The Last Of The Saxon Kings • Edward Bulwer-Lytton

... his hair fairly bristle. He contented himself, however, with drawing up the programme of an immediate war between France and ...
— The Dodge Club - or, Italy in 1859 • James De Mille

... prevision that only a few more years would be allotted him for work; when he began on the mass his inspiration was like a river that had broken its bounds. Every nerve and fibre of his being called him to his work. He was like a war-horse that scents the battle. He now abandoned himself more than ever to the impulse for creating. For the next few years he lived the abstracted life of the enthusiast to whom every-day concerns are but incidental ...
— Beethoven • George Alexander Fischer

... John Wesley was the daughter of Dr. Samuel Annesley, an eminent minister of the Church of England at the period of the great Civil War. He resigned his charge, being one of the two thousand who, after the Restoration, declared for Nonconformity, and preached their farewell sermons in the Established Church, on the 17th of August, 1662. He found his sphere in the meeting-house of ...
— Excellent Women • Various


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