Fractious in a sentence as an adjective

Now, it seems that dialog has broken down and we are in fractious camps.

Years ago, your post [1] about a fractious, joyous workplace shaped me as I entered the workforce.

The system is built on the fact that the president will overreach, the congress will be fractious, etc.

Yet it's downmodded to dead status, something that other comments in the same thread didn't have happen despite being much more fractious.

I think the current state in the US where there are two cultures which divide the population into two modes is harmful, since it makes society fractious and hostile.

Those folks specialize in managing fractious communities such that the volunteers not only stick around, they're happy to pay for the privilege.

Dwight D. Eisenhower if only as a political general who kept the fractious Allied commanders and units together.

Everyone thinks they know what everyone else should use; and it makes for a very fractious environment with regards to what languages should get used... C# and Objective-C are good examples of that.

In India’s poor and fractious society patronage politics is inevitable“

"One possible reason for the British response in the Religious vs National Identity question is that British identity can be a very fractious thing.

What nobody ever wants to discuss is that creating an ever-more culturally and ethnically fractious country is a huge problem looking ahead decades quite aside from near term GNP prints.

Their way would have been blocked by castles and town walls, each originally thrown up by one group in conflict with others—by a fractious nobility against its kings and against its own peasants, and by townsmen against them all.

"Reinventing every wheel "because $my_pet_language" is fractious, generally worse than the alternative, and creates fairly unproductive noise--I think it's reasonable that people should catch at least a little flak for doing it.

In recent years the vote has become fractious and controversial, with widespread acrimony, factional polarization, and several outright assassinations.

Fractious definitions

adjective

stubbornly resistant to authority or control; "a fractious animal that would not submit to the harness"; "a refractory child"

See also: refractory recalcitrant

adjective

easily irritated or annoyed; "an incorrigibly fractious young man"; "not the least nettlesome of his countrymen"

adjective

unpredictably difficult in operation; likely to be troublesome; "rockets were much too fractious to be tested near thickly populated areas"; "fractious components of a communication system"