Similar words: come to the fore, to the full, add fuel to the flames, to the core, the former, hold the fort, in the form of, play the fool.
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61. And a contingent of qualified space scientists and technicians has come to the fore.
62. Young people should step to the fore and help their peers.
63. Possessed of such qualities, how do you bring them to the fore and snare the job?
64. Extensive regional consultations that took place in the lead-up to GCARD will bring some of their views to the fore.
65. As the project developed, unsuspected difficulties came to the fore.
66. "That's a topic which has come to the fore very much recently."— 'Indeed.'.
67. Furthermore, a number of significant new topics have come to the fore in recent years.
68. Innumerable fine cadres have come to the fore from among the masses.
69. But without good news on these fronts, it's still very possible that another market flare-up could bring fears of rolling European defaults back to the fore.
70. In Switzerland the language problem has also to come to the fore.
71. Cliff self-produced the song, giving it a solid reggae backing, but keeping his vocals to the fore, the perfect combination of music and song.
72. Innumerable activists have come to the fore from among the masses.
73. But high - profile stars such as Colin Farrell have helped bring the accent more to the fore.
74. So why would they leave one man out? Three responses come to the fore.
75. If things were different, other names would have come to the fore.
76. The Portuguese voyages to the spice Islands, which brought the question of Java to the fore.
77. In this way many fine people will come to the fore.
78. Ever was she to the fore, lifting the webbed shoes and making the way easy.
79. We encourage top - notch talents with innovative ideas to come to the fore.
80. Beyond that their work deals with the capacity of the video medium to manipulate reality: the video's ostensibly objective documentary quality brings a fictive element in historiography to the fore.
81. Annie came to the fore to give Lou time to recover himself.
81. Wish you will love sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
82. This essay brings to the fore some of his faults in such aspects as rhyming, assonance, character-repetition and vowel-...
83. He came to the fore as a physicist at an early age.
84. He came to the fore a physicist at an early age.
85. The greater the failures became, the more obstinately his incurable amateurishness came to the fore.
86. One area where the conflict between quantum theory and relativity comes to the fore is in the gravitational constant, G, the quantity that describes the strength of gravity.
87. This factor will come increasingly to the fore as election day nears.
88. As the project develop, unsuspected difficulty come to the fore.
89. He says the use of imported children as jockeys in camel racing first brought the issue to the fore in the UAE.
90. This essay brings to the fore some of his faults in such aspects as rhyming, assonance, character-repetition and vowel-repetition with a view of reit...
More similar words: come to the fore, to the full, add fuel to the flames, to the core, the former, hold the fort, in the form of, play the fool, to that, before, therefore, to this day, to the last, to the hilt, go to the wall, to the life, reforest, deforest, wherefore, to the death, to the point, to the quick, to that end, to the limit, to the letter, go to the dogs, come before, beforehand, up to the mark, to the utmost.