How To Use Feverish In A Sentence

  • Washington dreamed his way along the street, his fancy flitting from grain to hogs, from hogs to banks, from banks to eyewater, from eye-water to Tennessee Land, and lingering but a feverish moment upon each of these fascinations. The Gilded Age, Part 1.
  • Dreadful!" moaned Sister Ann. "Adnah goes about sighing all the day, and looks over-long in the mirror, and takes unseemly pains with her dressing, and does up her hair with flowers, and has feverishly pink cheeks, and likes to sit in a corner and brood, and takes long walks by herself, and especially, _especially_, seems fond of moonlight! The Wit and Humor of America, Volume V. (of X.)
  • With its long claws, the zorilla digs feverishly after the prize, alternately sinking its nose into the ground until it comes up munching.
  • Hours of feverish activity lay ahead. The tents had to be erected, the stalls set up.
  • But there was always Leam in the background with whom he had to reckon -- Leam, who wandered through the house in her straight-cut, plain black gown, made in the deepest fashion of mourning devisable, pale, silent, feverish, like an avenging spirit on his track; undoing what he had done if he had profaned an embodied memory of her mother, and as impervious to his anger as he was to her despair. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 097, January, 1876
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  • bubonic plague, a bacterial infection marked by painful, feverish, swollen lymph nodes, called buboes. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • It's a bit feverish in the comments boxes, so let's take a couple tablets of Theology and chill, shall we?
  • He would play violently, feverishly, with a wild passionateness of gesture which robbed him of all ability to control his own technic. The Titan
  • 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.
  • She lay in bed, too feverish to sleep.
  • Hours of feverish activity lay ahead. The tents had to be erected, the stalls set up.
  • Hadley's impending nuptials preoccupied Aunt Grace with a feverish monomania. THE SEASON OF LILLIAN DAWES
  • A stellar third-person shooter that pulses with feverish invention, A&D welds together top-notch controls, a truly mental plot, and some of the most strategic gunplay to hit consoles in ages.
  • Finally came the time of machines, and rhythms of life became increasingly feverish and frantic.
  • When I returned, she was feverishly trying to change the channel to no avail, though her stairlift seemed to have acquired a life of its own.
  • Catnip is best known for treating feverish conditions but is also used for afterpains and other conditions.
  • An outbreak of feverish media coverage has been unleashed upon the United States.
  • Expanded, visually, beyond anything resembling the comparatively claustrophobic 1947 film which starred a wonderfully scrofulous Richard Attenborough, and imbued with a feverish morality that would have gratified Mr. Greene himself, the film is almost distractingly beautiful to look at, something that accentuates the tension between the film's conflicting quantities, i.e., the glories of the physical world, and the corrupted humanity it hosts. 'Idiot Brother': Silly, Satirical and Smart
  • The foxed corners and their yellowing hue recalled the nightmarish quality of those hours, his feverish lucubration, searching for their order, for their signification. At Swim, Two Boys
  • Do you suppose there’s anyone else in the world who’s such a silly-billy, with such feverish little knuckles, so afraid of waking me up and of not making me understand? Within a Budding Grove
  • The heat of the lobby seemed to affect her feverishly, disorientating her. THE LAST RAVEN
  • I spent the days, and some of the nights, of that summer feverishly filling reams of paper with formulas.
  • In those days, banking was not national, and New York and Chicago were in feverish competition. Chicago to New York: Drop Dead - Freakonomics Blog - NYTimes.com
  • He knew that by this route he would avoid meeting his companions; its difficulties and circuitousness would exercise his feverish limbs and give him time for reflection. On the Frontier
  • Werner's voice was a bit sharp; he was rattled by something almost feverish in her tone, and those twin spots of raspberry colour high on Gretina's normally sallow cheeks.
  • Ministry, the Giolittian organ, the Stampa, of Turin, has dropped something of its feverish neutralistic propaganda, the New York Times Current History; The European War, Vol 2, No. 3, June, 1915 April-September, 1915
  • They waited in a state of feverish anxiety for their mother to come home.
  • They worked feverishly to meet the deadline.
  • Black Narcissus is a fairy tale crossed with sexy nuns locked in feverish desire with a soupcon about the fading British empire. Michael Giltz: Movies: "Blimp" Is Back! British Gem Is Beautifully Restored
  • His face, almost in profile, shows a high coloring that is close to feverish and no doubt reflects his consumptive state.
  • And in the midst of all this feverish activity -- the fast-drying acrylics force him to work quickly -- a picture emerges.
  • The movie also sketches in the five-year-long, globe-girdling voyage during which he collected the compendious data for his book, along with much peripheral information about his health (wretched), his relationship with his devoutly religious wife (strained) and his apparently never-ending connection to his dead 10-year-old daughter (feverish). Kurt Loder Reviews ‘Creation’ » MTV Movies Blog
  • The No. 1 is what I call feverish in its vibrations, and would be certain to give any instrument a hollow tone, an instrument cuddled, tempered, and made to fit the ear of the expected purchaser by the experienced one who has it to dispose of. Violin Making 'The Strad' Library, No. IX.
  • Thou wert feverish and impatient this morning until thou wert fairly in it, with its mud and water plashing around thee; and now thou art here, with the trees crowding upon us so thickly that the sun looks not under them once in the whole year, thou creepest like a terapin upon thy journey, as if thou didst greatly fear thou wouldst too quickly get through it; a barren fear, this, for we see but the beginning: the bog deepens, and the day grows darker as we go. The Partisan: A Tale of the Revolution. By the Author of "The Yemassee," "Guy Rivers," &c. In Two Volumes. Vol. I
  • He slept feverishly all afternoon and into the night.
  • With it, we are aware in much of the art of the day of a certain feverish tentativeness, groping, as it were, sometimes after a new spirit, sometimes after a repristination of the old in a modern form; but everywhere, I repeat, we see Life. Modern Eloquence: Vol II, After-Dinner Speeches E-O
  • Hadley's impending nuptials preoccupied Aunt Grace with a feverish monomania. THE SEASON OF LILLIAN DAWES
  • His pulse was weak and feverish, more like a shiver than the pump of his life's blood.
  • The team worked feverishly to the November deadline.
  • He was no apologist, but the glittering, near-feverish eloquence of his writing suggests fascination, almost reverence.
  • Hours of feverish activity lay ahead. The tents had to be erected, the stalls set up.
  • However, after some feverish activity, Volkswagen is readying its entrant and it should be on show at Frankfurt next autumn.
  • As someone who spends a healthy if that's the word chunk of most weekends catching up on Friday night TV, here are some very strong arguments for even the most cabin-feverish among us to stay in this Friday night. Roush Review: Fringe, Supernatural, Spartacus: Friday Night Lights Up
  • The vague headache began some time during Friday, but, by evening surgery, I felt decidedly feverish and unwell.
  • Manning's prime ambition, on the other hand, is to occupy the Red House, and behind the galvanised paling surrounding the south of the Red House, workmen are quietly and feverishly preparing for his ceremonious entrance.
  • "I heard to my surprise the other day from Swan, whose son, it seems, was doing some work at Melcombe this spring (making a greenhouse, I think), that Mrs. Melcombe wintered at Mentone, partly on her boy's account, for he had a feverish or aguish illness at Venice, and she was advised not to bring him to England."
  • Both sides are feverishly trying to recruit new members to bolster their cause at the IWC.
  • I am now at Wilbye & am in great distresse through feare of beinge sick for I feele myselfe very aguish & feverish & know not what.
  • Wear clothes or pajamas suited to the indoor temperature, even when your child is feverish or has the chills.
  • I have had a slight feverish attack for the last few days, and I feel ill, or rather I feel low-spirited.
  • I touched his forehead. He felt hot and feverish.
  • The company is having to cast around feverishly for ways to cut its costs.
  • Nyna felt absolutely feverish with energy as she grasped the controls of the ship.
  • The Spaniards, in general, dislike a mixture of vanilla with the cacao, as irritating the nervous system; the fruit, therefore, of that orchideous plant is entirely neglected in the province of Caracas, though abundant crops of it might be gathered on the moist and feverish coast between Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • And Tib rises out of that little domestic struggle, covered with glory and crowned with respect; her price so infinitely beyond rubies, that "invaluable" is the only term that can be applied to her; and accordingly Dr. McNab, Mr. Malcolm, and the poor little suffering feverish Dagon himself, unanimously agree that she is invaluable; and the slight rustle of her voluminous silk gown, as she moves across the room to fetch the bottle of colchicum, with the soft slow heavy tread of the elephant, is music to her Dagon's ears. Stuart of Dunleath: A Story of Modern Times
  • Search as you may, you can find no evidence of all that feverish activity, but you know it's here.
  • There are, he says, at least 200 different species of bacteria breeding feverishly behind your lips.
  • The panic of 1873, which prostrated all business, was the result of the excesses of the war, the overissue of legal tender and the feverish, unhealthy expansion that followed. Ethics in Service
  • There was a bounce in his step and he whistled a high-pitched tune — full of sharp corners and feverish, screeching arpeggios. Blog Fiction | Sci-Fi | Tanjoubi | Station151
  • Derek Jarman opens his claustrophobic, skyless Caravaggio with the feverish artist on his shadowy deathbed.
  • If you feel sick or feverish, take your temperature as instructed by your doctor or nurse.
  • He was feverish some of the time, shaking, sometimes uncertain of where he was. THE LONGEST WAY HOME
  • As soon as the feverishly seething blood rushes over my brain and drowns my consciousness, the oldest devils, driving out and disarming all laterborn ones, come back again, and that best shows, without doubt, how they must once have tortured me. The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 09 Friedrich Hebbel and Otto Ludwig
  • The show was about to begin and backstage there were signs of feverish activity .
  • First with the bloggerati, then feverish emails from every fashion-literate acquaintance. Jess Blanch: Vogue Paris: Let the People Weigh in
  • it's enough to send you spiralling into a cold, feverish sweat.
  • And since the example was set on high and citizens mysteriously but constantly take the princes 'behavior as the standard for their own, it's the guarantee of a feverish, unassuaged, confrontational society where resentment and hatred will rapidly become the last ties of the social contract. Bernard-Henri Lévy: Nicolas Sarkozy's Three Errors
  • For even when coming into slight contact with the outer, vapory shreds of the jet, which will often happen, your skin will feverishly smart, from the acridness of the thing so touching it. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • Toward nightfall he grew feverish, and rang frequently the bell that summoned the banksman. A Son of Hagar A Romance of Our Time
  • He feverishly noted the name Archibald "Moonlight" Graham, Chisolm, Minn., and the details of his blink of a Major League career: One inning, zero at bats. Crosswalk.com - Home
  • But Conservatives are hoping the start of the long parliamentary recess and the finalisation of the judicial inquiry into the hacking will see the feverish energy surrounding the scandal finally dissipate as the public focuses on the economy and the euro crisis. David Cameron spoke to Rupert Murdoch's executives about BSkyB bid
  • 'Well not in -- not in, just yet,' he said with a sort of feverish confidentialness, as if he wasn't quite well. Gilbert Keith Chesterton
  • A sordid practicalism has made itself felt, due to a feverish desire to play an important rôle in the detail of current politics. German Culture Past and Present
  • Tamora now applied her feverish fingers to brewing the tea.
  • Until now, the public have had to rely on feverish speculation in numerous newspaper previews.
  • Never in its history had that little school seen such feverish activity.
  • Freedom feeds fillip and flames of frenzy in a few freak cases, but if it reaches a more feverish frequency, somebody ought to remind those folks to tone down their rhetorical crescendo to a decrescendo level. Pelosi gets emotional about political climate
  • Two days later, feeling feverish, she went to them and he could tell she was struggling to maintain her composure.
  • After this, I fell into a pretty sound and refreshing sleep, and lay till twelve o’clock, tolerably easy, considering I was very feverish, and aguishly inclined; and she took a deal of care to fit me to undergo more trials, which I had hoped would have been happily ended: but Providence did not see fit. Pamela
  • However, these symptoms may be absent and children may simply become feverish, drowsy and listless.
  • He had no appetite now, and besides if he was feverish he surely shouldn't eat. PROSECUTOR
  • Port managers are working feverishly to prevent a dockside doomsday.
  • She did not sleep, but lay tossing from side to side in feverish excitement the whole night – having, in fact, a terrible battle between her own fierce passions and her newly awakened conscience. The Hidden Hand
  • The onset of flu is characterised by feverish shakings and temperature swings.
  • And when Ronaldo drove home, not once, but twice, the excitement reached a feverish pitch.
  • Some children may become feverish, develop a rash or lose their appetite up to ten days after the injection.
  • For the past week, hundreds of lorries and workmen have passed through the castle gates as feverish activity went on inside the grounds.
  • There is nothing, my dear paternal Uncle, but one lambent, feverish fire, deliciously attractive, even in its angry heat, fascinating even whilst phlogistic, shooting out from every part of it, in all directions, into thine ---- Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 104, April 22, 1893
  • This kind of feverish cold is slow to cure; it often kicks back just when you think you are better.
  • The high feverishness during a outset will frail a breast skin as well as close in a turkey juices so they do not frizzle away. Quick! Help me cook a turkey! - Straight Dope Message Board
  • The tamasha over tickets has reached a feverish crescendo.
  • The men were split into teams, each working feverishly to extract a set of the clogged injectors. LET NOT THE DEEP
  • worked at a feverish pace
  • She seemed almost feverishly anxious to attend to his comfort.
  • In the feverish TV debates the questions come from the audience, but that distinction is pretty minor since no audience member is invited to go off-piste with his or her inquiry.
  • Her skin felt moist and feverish.
  • Hours of feverish activity lay ahead. The tents had to be erected, the stalls set up.
  • It is that strange disquietude of the Gothic spirit that is its greatness; that restlessness of the dreaming mind, that wanders hither and thither among the niches, and flickers feverishly around the pinnacles, and frets and fades in labyrinthine knots and shadows along wall and roof, and yet is not satisfied, nor shall be satisfied Archive 2007-03-01
  • We parted and slid down to the pillows, Heike feverish now with her hands up to her mouth. BLOOD IS DIRT
  • Their imaginations must be feverish enough to conjure up ever more daring flights of fancy, but then cold enough to try to annihilate their own creations.
  • Each time the word ice met her eye she recalled the parched lips that had moaned for it, the feverish hands that had clutched it so greedily when she brought it, and she thought if Sandford Berry could only see what she had done for some of the poor souls who "got on her nerves" he'd change his opinion about her efforts to help them being of no avail. Mary Ware's Promised Land
  • We was still alone, and no feverish words of mine can do justice to the fitfulness of his appearance as he sat at No. 4 table, increased by there being something wrong with the meter. Somebody's Luggage
  • If the patient is in severe pain or is feverish antimicrobials such as metronidazole 200 mg thrice daily for up to five days may be indicated.
  • Caillard was mounting a big black horse, a spirited, restless creature which champed at its bit and passaged feverishly about. Flying Colours
  • Rothman debunks the romantic notion of a doomed genius working feverishly by candlelight to commit his revolutionary theory of equations and groups to paper.
  • I'd hear a bird, follow the sound until I could see it, then flip feverishly through the field guide hoping to find a picture that would put a name to my quarry.
  • The seaboard of Capernaum in which Peter dwelt is said by travelers to be a peculiarly damp, marshy, aguish, feverish place.
  • Again, in some cases of what is commonly called feverish cold, stimulants like ammonia assist A Strange Story — Volume 02
  • A feverish atmosphere prevails at an otherwise-calm environment of the Museum complex.
  • You can therefore picture the flurry of preparatory activities, as we feverishly draw up To Do lists, and audit our entire wardrobes for suitable all-weather clothing.
  • The director has trouble convincing playgoers that the trio has been separated from one another for as long as the script suggests but does a dandy job bringing subsequent scenes to a feverish pitch.
  • The director has trouble convincing playgoers that the trio has been separated from one another for as long as the script suggests but does a dandy job bringing subsequent scenes to a feverish pitch.
  • The ordeal of Didier's first month on the island and the nights of feverish sleep had wasted the old ecologist. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • The hope to draw close and possess the truth of being can be feverish one.
  • Two days later, toward noon, Sandy began to show signs of excitement and feverish expectancy.
  • It is that strange disquietude of the Gothic spirit that is its greatness; that restlessness of the dreaming mind, that wanders hither and thither among the niches, and flickers feverishly around the pinnacles, and frets and fades in labyrinthine knots and shadows along wall and roof, and yet is not satisfied, nor shall be satisfied. Archive 2008-04-01
  • She was rattling on almost feverishly, never looking at him, restless in her saddle, shifting bridle, adjusting stirrups, gun-case, knotting and reknotting her neckerchief, all with that desperate attempt at composure which betrays the courage that summons it. The Firing Line
  • Since I was very young, whenever I'm off-colour and feverish I have the following recurring vision as I wander confusedly in the no-man's land between consciousness and sleep.
  • Mary's bright eyes were handsomer, larger -- too large, too feverish bright, too restless. CHAPTER XVII
  • I would sit in my rather dim, hot room with the scent from the lemon tree coming through the window, feverishly going through the same issues over and over again.
  • Without any prompting from Pettitt, he was feverishly muttering snippets from his stump speech in the middle of the frantic gesturing.
  • Beth was feverish and fitful, tossing about beneath the sheets, her head thrashing from side to side, muttering inaudibly from time to time.
  • City workers and volunteers are working feverishly to remove the heavy snow from the roofs of homes.
  • The daytime temperature reached ninety degrees, and the feverish Clark was moved from the stifling leather lodge to a more comfortable shaded bower the crew made for him.
  • You can imagine yourself in a stifling ballroom in Calcutta, full of feverish gaiety, while punkahs languidly stir the air.
  • After feverishly devouring Sandoval's mussels, everyone at the table passed around the remaining chipotle broth with tomato and cilantro, guzzling it like soup.
  • And when Ronaldo drove home, not once, but twice, the excitement reached a feverish pitch.
  • Throughout this period she had been intermittently feverish, anorexic and very much not herself.
  • The company is having to cast around feverishly for ways to cut its costs.
  • Tune in at 4 am tomorrow, when I may feverishly elaborate on the details.
  • She minces about, feverishly waving wands and batons (the child, not ‘Turtle’) at the crowd, then suddenly our eyes meet.
  • If he seems feverish (one way to tell is by feeling the ears; if they're hot, he prolly has a fever) or sluggish, get him to the emergency vet.
  • Octavia, of course, turned the conversation and spoke to the hostess, but she said the two beside her, in spite of not being on speaking terms chatted feverishly to each other for the rest of lunch to avoid pauses, in case, Octavia supposes, she should ask any more difficult questions. Elizabeth Visits America
  • The dominant industries are textiles and light manufacturing, as Guangzhou feverishly tries to keep pace with nearby Hong Kong.
  • If the plot of The Killer Inside Me seems flimsy -- even arbitrary and contrived -- well, that's an element of Thompson's stories: a fervid, almost feverish quality, a helplessness to deal with bad impulses and a quick canniness for covering one's tracks. Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: The Killer Inside Me
  • He willed the farm to Annie before lapsing into delirium and feverishly mumbling his last words in the Maori he knew so well.
  • These patients were given hygiene advice and told to return if they became feverish.
  • Jumping up, she fetched the carpet sweeper and a duster from the kitchen, and set to work with feverish energy. Tradecraft
  • Each passing year's is usually billed with feverish excitement as ‘the most important of his political life’.
  • He wished for a doctor, a sterile hospital bed, a cool hand on his feverish forehead.
  • He was feverish some of the time, shaking, sometimes uncertain of where he was. THE LONGEST WAY HOME
  • They waited in a state of feverish anxiety for their mother to come home.
  • It allays a feverish thirst that had parched me for many days.
  • When Mexican damsels reach that "hood" which permits of long dresses and big bustles, they are in feverish expectation until, during a walk or drive, a flash from a pair of soft, black eyes tells its tale and a pair of starry ones sends back a swift reply, and with a tender sigh she realizes she has learned that which comes into the lives of them all. Six Months in Mexico
  • The show was about to begin and backstage there were signs of feverish activity .
  • He had no appetite now, and besides if he was feverish he surely shouldn't eat. PROSECUTOR
  • I have been feeling a little cabin feverish as here in almost always sunny Phoenix we had terrible rains, flooding and trees down. Mi-vitesse - French Word-A-Day
  • On examination, he was feverish with generalised lymphadenopathy and widespread crusting papulopustular lesions.
  • And this Moroccan question, how feverish is the feeling in that momentous conclave. Canada and Imperial Defence
  • The former dramatic soprano dresses for the camera, cheeks feverish with rouge, a multipointed jester's hat and veil on her head, bejeweled hands, ratty fur stole.
  • And while I was a whit dismayed at some of the bug that was aimed at littВrateur Susan Jeffers (a numbers of people posted feverish reviews suited for her apply for on Amazon), what did beat a hasty depart notable me conviction was that people made it certain that they soupЗon irrefutable feelings with compliments to the debouchment. The Culture of Sharing: Why Releasing Copyright Will Be the Smartest Thing You Do | Write to Done
  • At Wesel, in the rear of all this travelling and excitement, Friedrich falls unwell; breaks down there into an aguish feverish distemper, which, for several months after, impeded his movements, would he have yielded to it.
  • A visit of his youth to the Island grave of Chateaubriand; his early memories, as a poetical aspirant, of the magnificent flatteries by which Victor Hugo made himself the god of young romantic Paris; his talks with Montalembert in the days of _L'Avenir_; his memories of Lamennais 'sombre figure, of Maurice de Guérin's feverish ethereal charm; his account of the opposition _salons_ under the Empire -- they had all been elaborated in the course of years, till every word fitted and each point led to the next with the' inevitableness 'of true art. Robert Elsmere
  • Congress is working feverishly to pass the bill.
  • The clamour reached a feverish pitch as winners too joined the chorus of the losers in protesting against the decisions.
  • Last night saw some feverish activity preparing the basic brine to make bacon with the belly pork, and finding a suitable vessel in which to do the curing.
  • You will not be surprised to hear that I got up the next morning feverish and unrefreshed, and I felt quite envious of Tom when I saw him holding his shortly-cropped bullet head under the spout of the pump in the back yard, waggling the handle awkwardly as he had what he called "a sloosh. The Golden Magnet
  • During this time of feverish activity, the life of the trifolau, dialect for truffle hunter, is a hard one.
  • That pits gas against diesel in a feverish battle for the lowest consumption and the cleanest exhaust at the cheapest price.
  • Wood's performance was all the more meritorious given that he felt feverish on arrival yesterday morning and even more so on completing his 18 holes.
  • In a nicely creepy scene they watch in bewilderment as animals flee from its cover, and the appearance of a feverish, flatulent hunter spells much worse to come.
  • She feverishly grabbed a brush herself and slashed about delightedly in kalsomine. Little Miss By-The-Day
  • Mummius had worked feverishly to devise the quickest and simplest method of procedure, as the most important numerical division for decimation was the decury of ten men; it went without saying that Crassus himself had been an enormous help with the logistics. Fortune's Favorites
  • Lapping up the lessons of the avant-garde, he spun the silkiest of cross-conceptual webs, ensnaring a generation of feverish young artists for whom cineartistic perfection was the highest imaginative feat.
  • During her illness she had feverish dreams.
  • The song's titular scream provides the frozen emotional centerpiece for a feverish and insistent dirge, and a rare moment of absolute release amidst an album often marked by a chilling sense of emotional confinement.
  • At any given time most people were breathlessly anticipating the arrival of the Queen, feverishly following her tour through the country, or basking in the afterglow of it.
  • Off they drive, Nic still with an excited, feverish grin on his face.
  • Dressed in black, and feverishly scribbling notes in leather-bound jotters, it was hard not to notice him at lectures and tutorials.
  • One reader says that when she feels well enough, she'll do feverish workouts at the gym.
  • As it dawns, the activities reach a feverish pitch.
  • She was devouring it, feverishly flipping pages and then writing things in the margins with a biro or highlighting sentences or whole paragraphs with a yellow highlighter pen.
  • A couple of days after arriving I came down with a slight feverish head cold.
  • His large gray eyes were mainly responsible for this feeling, and they blazed out feverishly from what was almost a death's-head, so thin was the face, the skin of which was a ghastly, dull, dead white. Chapter II
  • I touched his forehead. He felt hot and feverish.
  • SpongeBob and Patrick themselves are feverishly suggestible — no gimmick or promotion targeted at them can possibly miss. SpongeBob's Golden Dream
  • The dancers hurtled feverishly in a circle, then pressed outward into two parallel lines, trisecting the original diagonal pathway.
  • Working feverishly, the crew and shore team refitted the boat and sailed it to La Rochelle in time to rejoin the race in leg eight.
  • She knew she must drive herself forward with feverish energy or she would sink in a sea of misery. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • Guiana; among simarubaceous plants, the Quassia amara, celebrated in the feverish plains of Surinam; among terebinthaceous plants, the Rhus glabrum; among euphorbiaceous plants, the Croton cascarilla; among composite plants, the Eupatorium perfoliatum, the febrifuge qualities of which are known to the savages of North America. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • One year ago today, I was lying in the hospital, aching and feverish, nurses unable to start an IV on me.
  • Maurice de Guérin's feverish ethereal charm; his account of the opposition _salons_ under the Empire -- they had all been elaborated in the course of years, till every word fitted and each point led to the next with the 'inevitableness' of true art. Robert Elsmere
  • Both the other candidates have been feverishly trying to assess what damage he has caused them.
  • The Brownie was soon at the door, but not so soon as Ellen, who had dressed in feverish haste. The Wide, Wide World
  • She knew she must drive herself forward with feverish energy or she would sink in a sea of misery. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • His skin was sallow and shiny from the feverish sweat that drenched him as it had before in the foyer, but how long had he been like this, sitting here without aid?
  • On an iffier note, Jorgensen over-exaggerates the eccentric mannerisms of Moody, who's seen curling up childishly on his office couch in a fit of nerves one minute and working the phone feverishly the next: A slight staginess clings to this neurotic figure. 'Golden Boy's' soft touch lands hard knocks
  • But she was feverish so Kathy and Jean-Luc returned to Baltimore, and Kathy missed the afternoon session.
  • The State House at Trenton on the night previous to the balloting for the senatorship was a place of feverish activity. Woodrow Wilson as I Know Him
  • A fatal disease - tuberculosis, also called consumption - provided a favorite metaphor to represent the destructiveness of feverish emotions, such as pining or amorousness.
  • With an intro that's absolute insane scratch work, Flow maintains a feverish and surprisingly melodic tempo throughout the set.
  • Cortez made the short walk to the feverish scrum in McBride's corner and raised the Irishman's right arm in victory.
  • In hard-edged artificial light, the dancers enact feverish beach parties, orgies, murders, and seductions.
  • Working feverishly, the crew and shore team refitted the boat and sailed it to La Rochelle in time to rejoin the race in leg eight.
  • He imagined, in his feverishness, that he heard faint "yaps" every now and then; and he almost expected to see everybody lay down knife and fork. Five Little Peppers at School
  • The television drones on, white noise in the back of my feverish mind.
  • The Met were rightfully hammered and shaken up into a better police force although sadly most of the compensation was swallowed up by feverish vain legal teams.
  • Wouldn't it be fair, though, to expect a line or two -- even just one sentence -- stating the historical foundation for citizens 'concerns, before they are dismissed wholesale as "lathered" "feverish" and "fringe," as has become The Oregonian's custom? TOPOFF 4: A Teachable Moment for Portland and America
  • If the patient is in severe pain or is feverish antimicrobials such as metronidazole 200 mg thrice daily for up to five days may be indicated.
  • Rakovski moved on to Romania, where he continued his feverish journalistic and revolutionary activities.

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