Similar words: thatched, thatcherism, thatch, hatcher, thatching, hatches, hatchet, hatchery. Meaning: n. 1. British stateswoman; first woman to serve as Prime Minister (born in 1925) 2. someone skilled in making a roof from plant stalks or foliage.
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61. In the name of economic liberalism, the Thatcher governments made war on traditional institutions and traditional elites.
62. First, it omits the first two years of the Thatcher government's record, when output fell 3.5 percent.
63. There was a woman newsreader, whose name sounded like Magda Tacker, and we soon called her Margaret Thatcher.
64. But it was Margaret Thatcher who reaped all the benefits.
65. After the 1987 election Mrs Thatcher can claim to have a very clear mandate.
66. In the event, under heavy Foreign Office pressure which she secretly resented, Mrs Thatcher gave way completely.
67. She played Mrs Thatcher in Anyone for Denis and in a television comedy.
68. So far Lady Thatcher has signed thousands of copies of the book.
69. Then, in 1986 the Thatcher government abolished the metropolitan counties.
70. After the Thatcher revolution, nostalgia for the lost stabilities and decencies of the welfare state is understandable.
71. I don't think he made an outstanding contribution to chemistry - rather in the Thatcher mould.
72. He is more popular than either Margaret Thatcher or Neil Kinnock.
73. The Thatcher government's policy, effected in the Broadcasting Act of 1990,(www.Sentencedict.com) provoked intense debate.
74. But he says he's in good company ... Margaret Thatcher took eighteen months before she made hers.
75. Hasn't anyone told Mrs Thatcher that bottled water can cost a thousand times as much as water from the tap?
76. From the outset, Mrs Thatcher had the sense of being a political outsider.
77. But when the Thatcher boom went bust Sugar's business declined with it - and so did Amstrad's market rating.
78. One of the many things that Mrs Thatcher has learned during her time in politics is how to milk election campaigns.
79. Developments in primary care Primary care did not escape the attention of the Thatcher government either.
80. In 1988 Margaret Thatcher squeezed sight-test charges through Parliament only after a Tory rebellion that shrank her majority by 28 votes.
81. Margaret Thatcher, too, realized the potential of having this major capital project financed by the private sector.
82. The Thatcher government has opposed planning controls over agriculture that could have stopped the spread of intensive arable farming.
83. He hinted that she might even receive an honour from the then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher if she gave her support.
84. So Mrs Thatcher, demonstrating hitherto unsuspected social graces, decided to step into the breach herself.
85. In June 1983, Margaret Thatcher went to the polls for the second time.
86. A concatenation of events particularly damaging Mrs Thatcher was subsequently compounded by errors of tactics and organisation by those running her campaign.
87. The party had not yet come to terms with the departure of Mrs Thatcher and was suffering an identity crisis.
88. Mrs Thatcher has made much of Britain's scientific brilliance and innovative poverty.
89. The depth of the resentment Mrs Thatcher aroused was occasioned by the challenge she represented.
90. To many people, football fans are the epitome of the selfish individualism spawned by Mrs Thatcher.
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