[ US /ˈfɝvɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. feelings of great warmth and intensity
    he spoke with great ardor
  2. the state of being emotionally aroused and worked up
    he tried to calm those who were in a state of extreme inflammation
    his face was flushed with excitement and his hands trembled
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How To Use fervor In A Sentence

  • MBM " is the innovation is unprecedented, the fervor concentrates on English of abbreviation three dimensional quality development training.
  • This is the more surprising given the many build-up signs anticipating much greater outbursts of millenarian fervor around the year 2000.
  • He took up the cause with evangelical fervor.
  • These may be true, but these are arguments that appeal to the dispassionate mind of a judge, not the emotional public fervor.
  • However, beginning in 1993 there was intense messianic fervour in the community.
  • Such purism and moral fervor seem inimitable for art writing today.
  • Ten years ago, the Persian Gulf War again dredged up anti-Muslim, anti-Arabic fervor and again I was afraid. An American Story | PopPolitics.com
  • As they grow up amid the emerging wave of nationalist fervor, their friendship becomes strained as they find themselves on opposite sides.
  • The chosen 22 walked out into the most expectant atmosphere Lansdowne Road has witnessed in years, the feverish mood of the moment intensified by rival national anthems sung with exceptional fervour.
  • It will be a nice test of the country's appetite for religious fervor.
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