প্রত্যপহার, প্রত্যধিকার, প্রত্যহিংসা, প্রতিশোধ গ্রহণ
(1) A retaliatory action against an enemy in wartime,revenge
(2) A retaliatory action against an enemy in wartime
(3) Revenge
(1) The threat of reprisal
(2) Zimmerman continues: u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510Those people to whom trade, growth and profit count most make the point that economic reprisals are inevitable.u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb
(3) But tell me, hasn't the pharmaceutical industry fearing reprisals changed that somewhat, in fact, started policing itself, and toned down some of this stuff?
(4) People rightly aren't willing to risk destroying their own careers if they sense there isn't sufficient protection from reprisals by their superiors.
(5) The other side of the coin is the individual's right to personal privacy and the right, of say human rights activists, to communicate online without fear of reprisals from repressive regimes needs to be protected.
(6) However, the key feature of such trust relations is an absence of opportunism, in that individual firms will not fear reprisals after any reorganization of interfirm relations.
(7) By its lack of information, the text distances the - individual homicides from the history of reprisals that area prominent feature-of sectarian murders.
(8) She is panicked about possible reprisals at work because of her illness and absences, together with the fact that she is seeing a psychiatrist.
(9) Between the rants and reprisals the couple meet, and still unaware of their counterparts' real identities take a liking to one another.
(10) The twentieth century saw many examples of arts playing a powerful political role, sometimes eliciting harsh reprisals and censorship, even death.
(11) Like Grandma, the two guerrillas had taken revolutionary names to bolster their morale and, in the advent of capture, to shield their villages and families from reprisals .
(12) Instantly, as if fearing reprisals , she lowered her head in a respectable, subservient manner and said nothing more as she bustled toward the door.
(13) The citadel was evacuated to avoid political reprisals in the 1780s, but civilians remained in the fortified town until its decline in the mid-nineteenth century.
(14) Negotiations can consist of suggesting courses of action, threatening reprisals , offering to work together, showing or demanding to see cards, or anything at all.
(15) Although that revolt failed, the brutal Ottoman reprisals , which killed 30,000 Bulgarians, drew Europe's attention to what had previously been considered an Ottoman backwater.
(16) No one was arrested in the 1983 incident, but professional reprisals did follow.
(17) Though the British as a whole supported the policy of reprisals , the toll of death and destruction in Berlin and other large cities caused misgivings and public questioning of the morality of u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510areau251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb bombing.
(18) It turns out they are using the house to launch raids in the neighbourhood, prompting Mohammad's son Jamal to plot reprisals against the occupiers.
(19) The reason that serious entertainment journalism only tends to exist in major outlets is that only major outlets can scare the system out of reprisals for their honesty.
(20) The Allies, who were at one stage two daysu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb march from Paris, had circulated details of their planned reprisals , so that the Revolutionaries knew who was to be tortured to death and who merely imprisoned for life.
retaliation
counterattack
comeback
revenge
vengeance
retribution
requital
a taste of one's own medicine
Kindness
Sympathy
Sympathy