('Occasion for war') is an act or event that provokes or is used to justify war.
1The violation of property rights by Germany as a cause for war.
2Monsieur, under all circumstances there would be cause for war between us.
3He knew nothing of my new cause for war; there was enough of the old!
4Out of this had grown the principal cause for war in the history of the realm.
5They might bluster, and still not fight; and indeed they lack any rational cause for war.
6There was something vastly convincing in Jake Pratt's quiet drawl as he set forth the cause for war.
7It would be cause for war.
8Laurence was silent, thinking of Temeraire's willingness to spring out a cause for war and all for his sake.
9Of these grievances the last two had not up to this time been put forward as cause for war.
10To speak of roasting a Samoan chief is a deadly insult and a cause for war (Turner, 108).
11He said that, although we had doubtless suffered many wrongs, there was more cause for war with France than with England.
12But stop-without going out of one's way to find a cause for war-didnot North America once belong to the English?
13No less high-handed than Great Britain's were Napoleon's offenses against American commerce, and there was just cause for war with France.
14He would not be drawn on whether Israel would see as a cause for war any possession by Hezbollah of Syrian-supplied Scuds.
15If there were no such possessions, or if they were more equally divided, there would be very little cause for war amongst nations.
16The Chinese and the Afghans did not find her very forbearing, though with neither of those peoples had she any just cause for war.
Translations for cause for war