Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But he said it had left the nation with intractable social problems.
This is why he's been so intractable in his position against us.
Society's problems were so intractable, he said, that the city could not stop every death.
"It seems now as if the problem is more intractable."
Instead, as Congress headed home last week, the issue seemed intractable.
Public education is one of the most intractable problems the city faces.
"But it appears the problems are more intractable than thought."
But none of the issues is new, and some seem intractable.
"A problem which was not intractable appeared to become so."
It was not like her to be so closed or intractable.
Such demands, he says, only make the problems more intractable.
Looking at numbers like these, it may seem as if the nation's drug problem is all but intractable.
And there are all the clients whose problems seem intractable.
He's too intractable, and I could not support his resolution.
But as a technical matter, these problems are not intractable.
She'd never known him in such an intractable mood before.
Garbage has always been one of those intractable city issues.
Yet in the end, he says that China's intractable problems are going to be too much for the current political system.
Part I of the problem, on the other hand, had proved quite intractable.
By 1951, the two sides were no longer meeting and the situation seemed intractable.
It just seems so intractable and there is nothing in the notes to help me out.
Indeed, some of the veterans seem to have intractable problems.
"I think people are frustrated because these problems seem intractable," she said.
"I have found him to be absolutely intractable," she said.
But after that goal, Smith was intractable until the third period.