Definitionn. an inclination to favor one group or view or opinion over alternatives
Last update: August 10, 2015
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The most moderate form of the censure presents him in the odious light of a trimmer; the vulgar and venomous assailant is sure that Erasmus was a Protestant at heart, but withheld the avowal that he might not forfeit the worldly advantages he enjoyed as a Catholic. When by study of his writings we come to know Erasmus intimately, there is revealed to us one of those natures to which partisanship is an impossibility. [Please select]
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This proof of her partisanship, that she had come to him at the crucial instant, overwhelmed him. [Please select]
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Hatred, partisanship, cliques, jealousy, intrigues are the natural consequences of this aimless, materialist art. [Please select]
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Suicide, murder, violence, low and unworthy thoughts, hate, hostility, egotism, envy, narrow "patriotism," partisanship, are elements in the spiritual atmosphere. [Please select]
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Their zealotry was sustained by political theories which made no distinction between partisanship and sedition. [Please select]
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The prevailing idea in Washington's time, both in England and America, was that partisanship was inherently pernicious and ought to be suppressed. [Please select]
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We do but name them here because they still afford a large section of mankind scope for sentimental partisanship and mutual annoyance. [Please select]
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