Similar words: nervous, nervously, fervor, reservoir, fervent, fervently, effervescent, clairvoyant. Meaning: ['fɜrvə(r) /'fɜːv-] n. 1. the state of being emotionally aroused and worked up 2. feelings of great warmth and intensity.
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31, With the fervour of a convert, she determined to spread her new faith in strongly Protestant Wimbledon.
32, People who were infused with a fervour which drove them on.
33, The connection between religious fervour and rebellion-as in the Taiping rebellion of the 1850s-is vivid.
34, He suddenly wished, with an almost desperate fervour, that he'd asked the names of Karen's daughters.
35, Gary half-turned, spotted him out of the corner of one eye and began to dig again with great fervour.
36, The man who was now pumping my hand with just a little too much fervour was completely bald.
37, This explains the fervour with which they perform their outreach work.
38, National or political fervour can alternatively be the motor force of remarkable artistic achievements.
39, Nowhere is the collision between neoclassical detachment and Romantic fervour more acutely represented than in these two essays.
40, Unlike Colin, who remains slightly sceptical, Mister C espouses the McKenna message with an evangelical fervour.
41, A few businessmen admit privately to admiring his honesty, if not always his fervour.
42, Anglers sing the praises of Loch Assynt with similar fervour to that expressed by Norman MacCaig.
43, These poems express the revolutionary fervour of the poet.
44, I am cold; no fervour infects me.
45, But now this triumph has cooled my fervour.
46, He supported his local team with a fervour that border on idolatry.
47, Pray for me Saint ...(name), for with fervour I come to thee(Sentence dictionary), speedy helper and intercessor for my soul.
48, There might be a rekindling of the kind of nationalistic fervour of yesteryear.
49, The surroundings helped extinguish any idealistic fervour that might have existed.
50, Such affectionate, in the woman's eyes, is absolutely affection, his love, who come like a storm gather rain dances when fervour, such as after the storm wind light cloud pale.
51, He still retains the revolutionary fervour of the war years.
52, The religion Smith founded originated amid the great fervour of competing Christian revivalist movements in early 19th-century America but departed from them in its proclamation of a new dispensation.
53, In particular, it inspires an almost religious fervour among its customers.
54, As his interest mounted in his new life,[Sentencedict.com] Chueh - hui's youthful fervour knew no bounds.
55, But the motives for Mr Rudd's whale - protection fervour are not wholly pure.
56, Pray for me Saint..., for with fervour I come to thee, speedy helper and intercessor for my soul.
57, Inspires all Tau units on the map to fight with greater fervour.
58, As he wrote, his heart was permeated by a mystical fervour.
59, And on the other hand, it all led to a growing indignation with the Germans and a growing fervour of patriotism.
60, His eloquence and religious fervour had already given the earnest of high eminence in his profession.
More similar words: nervous, nervously, fervor, reservoir, fervent, fervently, effervescent, clairvoyant, devour, devout, vouch, favour, clairvoyance, voucher, endeavour, favourable, in favour of, rendezvous, mischievous, unfavourable, serve, nerve, swerve, pervade, offer, perverse, servile, observe, service, reserve.