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A stalemate.
in 1917 the war came to a stalemate, so neither side could win. USA joined the war on Britains side in April 1917. This caused the Germans to launch a final enormous attack on france, but they could not breakthrough.
The Germans and Allied troops reached a stalemate where neither side could advance. The only place they could go without loosing any ground was down, so soldiers started to dig trenches.
North Vietnam.
Actually, it can't. Somebody wins in chess, and if the game stalemates, it is unintentional. Mutually Assured Destruction is a kind of engineered stalemate to protect both parties, and forestall nuclear war, where neither side would win.
A stalemate.
Stalemate.
stalemate, draw, tie
A stalemate war. Neither side could advance, thus it was a stalemate.
Stalemate.
The usual term is 'stalemate', though you could also say 'deadlock' as well.
neither side could decisively beat the other
Both sides were too well matched. Neither side could gain a decisive advantage in gaining a forward thrust deep into enemy territory, without losing any advantage during the next counter-attack, and falling back to where they started from - resulting in stalemate.
A stand-off that neither side is able to break could be referred to as a stalemate. It can be used as a noun or a verb, and synonyms include impasse, and deadlock.
This is called a stalemate I'm doing vocabulary with my students and this happens to be one of their words.
Stalemate: A situation in which neither side can make progress or achieve a resolution.
yes, basically both sides where in a stalemate neither side acted