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trench warfare
noun
- combat in which each side occupies a system of protective trenches.
trench warfare
noun
- a type of warfare in which opposing armies face each other in entrenched positions
trench warfare
- Warfare marked by slow wearing down of the opposing forces and piecemeal gains at heavy cost. The term applies especially to World War I .
Word History and Origins
Origin of trench warfare1
Example Sentences
Instead, deepening partisan trench warfare will only worsen fights over the basic rules of voting, undermining the shared legitimacy of elections on which democracy depends.
This produces a deeply polarizing and highly destructive form of partisan trench warfare that threatens to erode the very legitimacy of American democracy.
Early airpower theorists were not only repelled by trench warfare.
There was a lot of trench warfare between the Princesses Margaret and Michael, too.
Illinois is a key front in a GOP contest that has become political trench warfare.
The problem with the proportional system's chronic trench warfare this year is that it prolongs the misery of a lackluster field.
There was and will never be another war like the Great War: hand-to-hand combat, trench warfare.
Most people are rather ill after the trench warfare of the last two days.
But the trench warfare has rooted them to the spot for a weary time.
A shallow psychology (as the author points out), especially in these days of trench warfare!
She merely established another line of trench warfare among the high mountains of her picturesque north-eastern frontier.
The war on the Western front settled down to trench warfare.
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