It means the people who founded our country had to fight for the freedom of future generations. It means those who wish to be free today must also be willing to fight and die for that freedom when needed. "Liberating strife" is the fight for freedom. It means freedom is not free.
"Concertation" means strife and unhappiness.
Yes, the plural is strifes.
peace / agreement
Definitions of strife on the Web: * discord: lack of agreement or harmony * bitter conflict; heated often violent dissension* Strife is a first-person shooter computer game developed by Rogue Entertainment and published by Velocity, based on the Doom Engine (id Tech 1) from id Software. Strife added some role-playing game elements and allowed players to talk to other characters in the game's world.* Strife is an American hardcore punk band from Los Angeles, California, formed in 1991.* Violent conflict, usually brief or limited in nature
No. The word "wife" has a long I (whyf) and rhymes with strife and life.
meaning of a hero in strife
a combination of the words strife, and trifle. strife meaning difficultly
-noun 1. vigorous or bitter conflict, discord, or antagonism: to be at strife. 2. a quarrel, struggle, or clash: armed strife. 3. competition or rivalry: the strife of the marketplace. 4. Archaic. strenuous effort.
strife, it means anger or stress or sadness.
Tencendur means "strife."
The act of liberating or the state of being liberated.
Derived from the Old English element gyð meaning "strife, war".
The party is liberating the people and the government of the country.
There isn't a word "strifling" in the English language. It may be a misspelling or a non-standard variation of "struggling," which means facing difficulties or challenges.
strife :-The immature strife in the classroom cost the students a weeks worth of detention.
There are more than one definition of the work strife. The best place to look would be in the Oxford dictionary. This would help with the use of the word as well as give examples of the word in a phrase.
Literally, "With their death they bury their parents' strife." Romeo and Juliet! :)