How to Use hot war in a Sentence
hot war
noun-
Under the rigors of a live, hot war, these products break down.
— Samanth Subramanian, WIRED, 5 Oct. 2023 -
In the early nineteen-nineties, each of these conflicts became a hot war.
— Masha Gessen, The New Yorker, 29 Sep. 2023 -
Is Facebook ready or even willing to help during a hot war?
— Andy Kessler, WSJ, 2 Jan. 2022 -
Of all the intractable issues that could spark a hot war between the United States and China, Taiwan is at the very top of the list.
— Brendan Rittenhouse Green, Foreign Affairs, 16 June 2022 -
Under the rigors of a live, hot war, commercial products break down.
— Samanth Subramanian, WIRED, 5 Oct. 2023 -
As 2022 dawns, however, a more pressing crisis has come to the fore: the unexpected prospect of a hot war in Europe.
— M.e. Sarotte, WSJ, 7 Jan. 2022 -
The experts assumed that this would soon change, and that they’d be mobilized in a hot war against malevolent fakers.
— Daniel Immerwahr, The New Yorker, 13 Nov. 2023 -
Wednesday, Biden suggested the U.S. might soon be in a hot war with nuclear-armed Russia.
— Jack Durschlag, Fox News, 8 Apr. 2022 -
As arguably the first hot war of the cold war, Korea was a proving ground for the US military and America’s sphere of influence.
— Lauren Kane, The New York Review of Books, 14 May 2022 -
But a cold war, or a hot war, with a major foreign debt holder would be problematic.
— Michael Taylor, San Antonio Express-News, 10 Feb. 2021 -
That effort starts in Ukraine, where a hot war has been underway in the east for five years, and a cyberwar underway in the capital, Kiev.
— David E. Sanger, New York Times, 14 Nov. 2019 -
The Court of the 1960s clearly believed that the United States people could deal with Communist propaganda, even during the hot war of that time.
— Anupam Chander, Wired, 21 Sep. 2020 -
But Sternberg plays out a Cold War pantomime that parallels the hot war of male–female relations.
— Armond White, National Review, 8 June 2022 -
And now it’s about urging the administration to prevent us from stumbling into a hot war.
— Kk Ottesen, Washington Post, 23 Mar. 2022 -
The concert worked well when members’ core interests aligned, but when the conservative consensus cracked, so did the concert, which erupted in a hot war over Crimea in 1853.
— Michael Beckley, Foreign Affairs, 22 Aug. 2023 -
Ships and shore stations suspended preparations and training for the Korean hot war for a day in honor of fallen buddies.
— San Diego Union-Tribune, 31 May 2022 -
Russia is waging two wars right now: a hot war with Ukraine whose costs are measured in death and destruction, and a cold war with the West whose costs are measured in economic hardship and inflation.
— WSJ, 30 June 2022 -
These moves would risk explicitly drawing the United States into the conflict and drawing us closer to a hot war between the world's two largest nuclear powers.
— Isabella Murray, ABC News, 15 Mar. 2023 -
When the occupant of the White House and the sycophants surrounding him are prepared to use anything, including real-world battles — trade wars and hot wars — to win a political battle at home, nothing and no one is safe.
— Robert Reich, Anchorage Daily News, 28 Mar. 2018 -
Russia’s strongman has sent an alarming buildup of troops and weaponry to the front lines with Ukraine—an escalation that threatens the renewal of a hot war in Europe, with America and Russia on opposing sides.
— Susan B. Glasser, The New Yorker, 8 Apr. 2021 -
The planet, Urras, is a lot like ours: beautiful, capitalistic, unequal, and filled with nations in continuous cold and hot wars.
— Vox Staff, Vox, 21 Dec. 2018 -
This is particularly difficult in a hot war situation, like Ukraine, where weapons can go from concept to turners of the tide in a matter of weeks, and the other side must quickly invent countermeasures—or lose the war.
— Kyle Mizokami, Popular Mechanics, 2 Aug. 2023 -
Reagan fought and won a cold war because even a successful hot war might have resulted in the annihilation of a significant portion of our population.
— James Freeman, WSJ, 9 Mar. 2022 -
On their own, these proposals are thoughtful and mostly reasonable, and avoiding a hot war between great powers is understandably Doyle’s overarching goal.
— Blaise Malley, The New Republic, 5 Oct. 2023 -
Capitulation might be worth a try if the only alternatives were a catastrophic hot war or an endless and financially crippling cold war.
— Michael Beckley, Foreign Affairs, 22 Aug. 2023 -
Unlike in 1962, a hot war is already raging over territory that one side considers important to its national interest, and the other knows is necessary to its national survival.
— Tom McTague, The Atlantic, 14 Mar. 2022 -
Like the first Cold War, a second would have disastrous consequences for the world: arms races, proxy wars, an inability to address pressing global concerns of security and inequality, and a looming risk of deterioration into a hot war.
— Blaise Malley, The New Republic, 5 Oct. 2023 -
This will require hard tradeoffs, but a hot war that directly involves U.S. forces will be far more expensive; protecting American national security and lives through effective deterrence is worth the sacrifice of lesser domestic priorities.
— Daniel Twining, National Review, 23 Jan. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'hot war.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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