0 a feeling of hate and continuing anger about something in the past: --
1 bitter anger or unfriendly feelings: --
Can we settle this disagreement without rancor?
It incited rancor and division between the new revivalists and the old traditionalists who insisted on ritual and doctrine.
Government appropriation of private land for the lake caused rancor among locals with historic land holdings.
With all our freedom and variety of opinion, my colleagues will bear me witness, our discussions have never degenerated into personality or rancor.
It is not our wish to stir up religious rancor, or to engage in theological disputations or to draw odious comparisons beteween two faiths.
It incited rancor and division between the old traditionalists who insisted on ritual and doctrine and the new revivalists.
The resulting rancor within the group contributed to its disbanding in 1886.
One such feature is the rancor which appears prominently in a single-player level but is not in any multiplayer maps.
It also led, however, to rancor; what had previously been a debate characterized by logic erupted into name-calling.