How To Use Furore In A Sentence

  • When information about that case emerged, it caused an international furore. Times, Sunday Times
  • The publication of the government's submission provoked another public furore.
  • So I felt for Mariella Frostrup with the ensuing furore about her presenting one edition of Panorama.
  • After quoting this, Gary goes on to say how he thinks some of the furore is missing the point: Archive 2005-12-01
  • I slightly regret this quavering furore, since it distracts attention from the praise which it seems that I "lavished" (Mr. Erlich sounds hard to please) on Miss Himmelfarb's brilliant book. True Minds
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  • The coalition hopes the move will calm the political furore over energy prices, which have risen rapidly in the past year. Times, Sunday Times
  • The security leaks have caused a widespread furore.
  • There's been much talk of how he deals extensively and enthusiastically with the recent furore but I was more taken aback by his outfit. Times, Sunday Times
  • The action by the local Council has created furore among ramblers, who say that the action was wrong and a mockery of consultation procedures laid down by law.
  • Create more of a divide between Scotland and England/Wales and the resultant furore is further evidence of the growing and tangible fractures. Police Pay Award (Lose the smiles) « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • There was a recent furore about his plans to build a second swimming pool at his country home in the Cotswolds. Times, Sunday Times
  • Olly's Onions: Obama in roving eye furore skip to main | skip to sidebar Obama in roving eye furore
  • Less than two years after a furore erupted over draughtsmen preparing drawings and plans for planning permission, the Council again finds itself embroiled in controversy as a result of a junior employee carrying out a ‘drawings nixer’.
  • The sale of the two best players caused a furore among the fans.
  • Miss Tempest, with a woman's daring, and the true spirit of "cussedness," took every risk, and, though even the enthusiastic and misinformed London papers have been obliged to avoid pet allusions to the "furore created in America" by the unfortunate Ainslee's, Vol. 15, No. 6, July 1905
  • Hema returned home after media publicity led to a furore in the state legislature.
  • In the ensuing furore, the arguments put forward on both sides have gone from the sublime to the ridiculous.
  • Both main parties accept that they will be damaged by the recent furore. Times, Sunday Times
  • The move will spark a fresh furore over payments at banks that were bailed out by the taxpayer. Times, Sunday Times
  • That was 12 years ago and Phil has long since forgotten the furore his unfortunate remarks caused.
  • Si qui sic moriantur, aut infirmitas, aut ambitio, aut dementia cogit eos; 'tis mere madness so to do, [2783] furore est ne moriare mori. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Now, at 33 he is stirring up a huge furore in the feuilletons with his novel ‘Con le peggiori intenzioni’ (with the worst intentions).
  • His last novel created a furore among the critics.
  • They chose to keep mum then and now are raising a furore over bad roads.
  • It followed the furore over Carol Thatcher's use of the word golliwog during a private conversation after the BBC's One Show. Home | Mail Online
  • Partly because of the furore surrounding these mortgages, they are no longer available, so the couple will have to consider another option. Times, Sunday Times
  • The convicted racist and public funding parasite behind the furore is one Ruggie Johnson of The Monitoring Group North. Another Fine Officer Down « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Such was the furore in cyberspace that the local propaganda department issued a notice calling for four 'netizen' investigators. Times, Sunday Times
  • The furore is just another thing to add to a dire display on the field. The Sun
  • Many of the self-proclaimed experts admit no one really knows what convergent media is or what it will become in the furore.
  • The furore is just another thing to add to a dire display on the field. The Sun
  • But the resulting furore is a tad over the top. The Sun
  • The disclosure has already caused a furore among MPs.
  • To Yacouba the new watchwords of democracy and modernization are vast improvements on the furore of the Revolution.
  • The scandal blew up into a major political furore.
  • Ex occursu daemonum aliqui furore corripiuntur, et experientia notum est. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • In the subsequent furore and in an effort to allay mounting concerns, RM agreed to 'encapsulate' the waste asbestos fibres in pellet form prior to dumping; they also agreed to install filters on the air extractor fans at the plant. [ Indymedia Ireland
  • SO far they have avoided scrutiny in the growing political furore over boardroom pay. Times, Sunday Times
  • The dry tone gave no hint of the public furore that would ensue. Times, Sunday Times
  • But still, the song’s power to invoke a furore is still there – not so long ago a school banned Imagine in case the students all decided to gang up and, um, imagine they didn’t have any stuff. Yoko Ono Talks About John Lennon For A Bloody Change
  • It ended in furore and the mayor had to use her gavel to restore order.
  • Yet somehow this secondhand concoction sparked an American furore. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carberry, recalling the furore that erupted when his colleague MP Judith David-Blair spoke about the President, questioned whether he was within line to quote what the President said in the LCDS before he read sections from the document. Stabroek News
  • The publication of the government's submission provoked another public furore.
  • They chose to keep mum then and now are raising a furore over bad roads.
  • The government's decision to raise taxes has caused a great furore.
  • ‘Much ado about nothing’ was her reaction to the furore that followed her son's admission late on Thursday that the reports were true.
  • The furore is another blow to the Jets, who were on the brink of collapse before NEWS.com.au | Top Stories
  • The whole furore happened when the public hadn't heard the song.
  • The furore among providers about current government-funding policies which challenge the latter assumption suggests that this is a real danger.
  • Lascivia superat equum, impudentia canem, astu vulpem, furore leonem. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • His choice of words created quite a furore.
  • The furore was increased by the ham-fisted police hunt for those responsible.
  • He is a no-mark, but the furore is turning him into a mysterious and dangerous global brand. Times, Sunday Times
  • The public furore over the future of the road continued on Monday as residents voiced their views at a public meeting.
  • His last novel created a furore among the critics.
  • Then he was accused of lying about getting a roasting from his mum over the furore. The Sun
  • It seems likely that he regrets more the international furore that it has caused. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the public furore that followed that comment, Abbott retreated from this position.
  • The atrocity sparked a worldwide furore. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Among the highlights were crowd trouble, arrests and the inevitable tabloid furore that accompanies such incidents.
  • The furore is just another thing to add to a dire display on the field. The Sun
  • In the public furore that followed that comment, Abbott retreated from this position.
  • But I'd no idea it had sparked this big furore. The Sun
  • The scandal blew up into a major political furore.
  • Renoldo interpret. ut parum absit a furore, rapitur a Lyceo in concionem, a concione ad mare, a mari in Siciliam, &c. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The stalling of the project has caused a public furore in Waitara, which has high levels of unemployment.
  • Having just come back from another week in Finland, I seemed to have missed all the fun and furore over the "aneurin glyndwr" website established by members of the Welsh Labour Party. Archive 2009-03-01
  • The BBC news site today has a surprisingly long article on the current furore surrounding London postcodes.
  • The furore among providers about current government-funding policies which challenge the latter assumption suggests that this is a real danger.
  • No, this isn't referring to the furore over the re-election of Sepp Blatter to the presidency of Fifa. WalesOnline - Home
  • A taste of the political furore likely to accompany the bonus season comes today from a key Washing ton powerbroker.
  • The political and press furore that ensued following his refusal of political asylum was substantial. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both have maintained they have been hard-done by and both have stirred up a public furore over whether they are the victims of the justice system.
  • His novel about Jesus caused a furore among Christians.
  • Tasmania's logging furore centres on the Styx Valley, the Tarkine, the Great Western Tiers, the Northeast Highlands, the Eastern Tiers, the Tasman Peninsula and the Leven Valley.
  • The disclosure of the payments will fuel the political furore over the large sums being earned by individuals at the top of the venture capital industry. Times, Sunday Times
  • After the furore over the schoolgirl rape victim, he risks having a controversial but respectable viewpoint mistaken for insensitivity.
  • Given the current furore, this seems eminently sensible: they are flat. Times, Sunday Times
  • I share Rahul Verma's cynicism about the coverage of the Behzti furore.
  • To modern eyes the furore may seem wildly overblown. Times, Sunday Times
  • The stalling of the project has caused a public furore in Waitara, which has high levels of unemployment.
  • The occasional incidents of newborn babies being stolen from public hospitals understandably causes a furore.
  • The whole furore happened when the public hadn't heard the song.
  • The BBC news site today has a surprisingly long article on the current furore surrounding London postcodes.
  • But aides made it clear this was just a postponement and she still plans to go ahead once the political furore and public protests have died down. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ingundis; and Leovigild, whose two sons, Hermenegild and Recared, were the issue of a former marriage.] [Footnote 128: Iracundiae furore succensa, adprehensam per comam capitis puellam in terram conlidit, et diu calcibus verberatam, ac sanguins cruentatam, jussit exspoliari, et piscinae immergi. History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire — Volume 3
  • A furore over footpaths is brewing in a South Lakeland village after taxpayers learned it could be nearly 10 years before decaying routes are repaired.
  • What has caused a bit more of a furore is the use of a sequence which is nearly identical to some well-known camcorder footage of the Twin Towers coming down: a skyscraper collapses, the wall of dust and debris shoots down the street, our characters take cover in a nearby store, and then emerge onto the dust-enshrouded street. Archive 2008-06-01
  • His resignation passed almost unnoticed amid the furore of the elections.
  • She has apologised to her fans over the furore about her apparent decision to wear fur, branding their concern regarding animal pelts "fair and applaudable".
  • Both have maintained they have been hard-done by and both have stirred up a public furore over whether they are the victims of the justice system.
  • Amid the furore, little has been heard from the emos themselves.
  • Hermenegild and Recared, were the issue of a former marriage.] 128 Iracundiae furore succensa, adprehensam per comam capitis puellam in terram conlidit, et diu calcibus verberatam, ac sanguins cruentatam, jussit exspoliari, et piscinae immergi. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The odd disapproving online comment has not become a furore. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was a furore amongst senior conservative dons, outraged at the possibility that they might assist a former youth offender and performance poet.
  • The public furore over the future of the road continued on Monday as residents voiced their views at a public meeting.
  • ‘Nabucodonosore,’ with Count Pizzicato, with a bellezza, a grandezza, a raggio, that excited in the bosom of the audience a corresponding furore: her scherzando was exquisite, though we confess we thought the concluding fioritura in the passage in Y flat a leetle, a very leetle sforzata. Mens Wives

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