Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"fervidly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows feelings that are too strong
"fervidly" Synonyms
passionately fervently enthusiastically ardently zealously intensely wildly eagerly vehemently strongly emotionally frenziedly excitedly fiercely warmly impetuously animatedly impulsively dearly deeply in earnest determinedly purposefully resolutely wholeheartedly with commitment with dedication with enthusiasm loyally faithfully devotedly dedicatedly dutifully truely staunchly devoutly scorchingly searingly burningly hotly fierily boilingly swelteringly torridly scaldingly sultrily redly sizzlingly tropically blisteringly blazingly bakingly parchingly flamingly hectically heatedly agitatedly hyperactively furiously turbulently frantically chaotically livelily excitingly confusedly frenetically feverishly boisterously riotously tumultuously glowingly brightly brilliantly shiningly radiantly luminously lustrously dazzlingly incandescently beamingly refulgently shinily effulgently lucently lambently fulgently lucidly splendidly clearly phosphorescently erotically sexily steamily sexually lubriciously sensually libidinously licentiously rousingly stimulatingly bawdily carnally explicitly lustfully naughtily racily ribaldly concupiscently lasciviously lecherously rashly recklessly hastily heedlessly incautiously precipitately foolhardily imprudently overhastily unthinkingly injudiciously precipitously hurriedly suddenly abruptly rushedly hotheadedly unexpectedly oratorically grandiloquently rhetorically bombastically orotundly magniloquently loftily pompously eloquently grandiosely linguistically pretentiously sonorously turgidly verbally epideictically euphuistically extravagantly flatulently floridly More

22 Sentences With "fervidly"

How to use fervidly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fervidly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fervidly". Mastering all the usages of "fervidly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Still, in his remarks, he spoke fervidly of his new role.
The closing scene, with its "Sopranos"-style lack of resolution, will be fervidly debated.
But no writer have I pushed more fervidly on a therapist than Raina Telgemeier.
But no writer have I pushed more fervidly on a therapist than Raina Telgemeier.
At home, Blake's wife — her beauty fading, her utility in descent — ignites his contempt just as fervidly.
He frequently and fervidly reached out to journalists, statisticians and fellow buffs and peppered professional forecasters with his findings.
As decades pass, fans of the Brooklyn Dodgers, perhaps the most fervidly nostalgic partisans in the history of sports, are growing fewer and fewer.
It also feels a little sad that a competition that became so fervidly belittled should have been the brainchild of two such remarkable football men.
And that a lot of the anti-Semitic comments he made weren't things that he fervidly believed, because everybody in his life, basically, his whole support team, was Jewish.
After the Civil War, he joined the Klan and fervidly embraced the cult of the Lost Cause, also ensuring that his children were "dipped deep" in this white supremacist ideology.
Even before he completed his 2016 takeover of Olympique de Marseille, the country's most popular, most fervidly followed, most compelling club, it had become abundantly clear just what he was getting into.
"Oh we kid ourselves there's future in the fucking / but there is no fucking future," I sang fervidly to myself after almost kissing my crush at a music festival during a Death From Above 1979 set.
BEE SEASON by Myla Goldberg Goldberg's first novel "is a dispassionate, fervidly intelligent book — she explores class, linguistics and religious extremism with the confidence of a born essayist — that comes by its emotion honestly," wrote our reviewer.
Aside from sleeping with an anime-style body pillow of Edith Piaf or moodily staring out a rain-slicked window, there are arguably few things more French than fervidly devouring some pâté heartily spread on a crusty chunk of baguette.
Although he once supported a ban on assault weapons on the home front, Donald Trump has shown no hesitation in readjusting as a presidential candidate to pander to the gun industry, fervidly vowing in January to end gun-free zones in schools and on military bases on his first day in the White House.
Holland Cotter, in his review of the exhibition in The New York Times, noted that Schiele and his "X-rated subject matter" is rarely seen in U.S. museums.Cotter, Holland. "ART REVIEW; Fervidly Drafting The Self And Sex", The New York Times, October 10, 1997. Accessed June 30, 2010.
The concept of ushr (tithe) had subsisted, in certain pockets of Chitral, for some time. After consulting state theologians, Shuja ul-Mulk in 1910 took the concept to scale and imposed ushr on a variety of agrarian produce. This new tax was fervidly resisted, particularly in the Ismaili majority Mastuj region. Nevertheless, it was forcibly imposed throughout Chitral by 1918.
Though no Zionist himself, Morgenthau cared "fervidly" about the plight of his co- religionists.Oren. Power, Faith, and Fantasy, p. 333. He initially rejected the position, but following a trip to Europe, and with the encouragement of his pro-Zionist friend Rabbi Stephen Wise, he reconsidered his decision and accepted Wilson's offer.Balakian. The Burning Tigris, p. 222. Appointed as U.S. Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in 1913, he served in this position until 1916.
Stanisław Osada (April 14, 1869 - July 28, 1934) was a Polonia activist, Polish nationalist, and author. His writings are credited with raising the national consciousness of Polish immigrants in the United States. He was born in Pruchnik and from a young age was active in the Polish insurrectionist circles in Galicia. Under a ceremonial oath to the group, he swore, "to dedicate [my] entire life and to be prepared at any time to shed one's blood for the freedom of the Fatherland." was fervidly patriotic and when he was conscripted into the Austrian Army, he organized fellow Poles to undermine their Austrian command.
The Bay of Naples, by Joseph Vernet, 1748 The population of Naples at the beginning of the 19th century was mostly made up of a mass of people, who were called the lazzarone and lived in extremely poor conditions. As well, there was a strong royal bureaucracy and an élite of landowners. When in January 1799 French revolutionary troops entered the city they were hailed by a pro- revolutionary minor part of the middle class, but had to face strong resistance by the royalist lazzari, who were fervidly religious and did not support the new ideas. The short-lived Neapolitan Republic tried to gain popular support by abolishing feudal privileges, but the mass of the people rebelled and in June 1799 the republicans surrendered.
As she lay dying, she wished fervidly to live in order to strike at those who had ordered the strike against her and others homes, at any cost: a long quiescent entity accepts her bargain. Tisiphone, one of the legendary three Greek Erinyes (Furies of Greek mythology), cannot heal Alicia's wounds, and so decides to instead take Alicia to a place "where time has no business" (pg 36) while rescuers are awaited. Rescuers eventually do come, but not before three separate over-flights fail to discover Alicia. Because her survival is deeply anomalous and inexplicable, Alicia is held in Fleet custody during her convalescence, and eventually handed over to personnel from the Imperial Cadre (the Emperor's elite special forces popularly known as "drop commandos"), which Alicia is legally still part of.
435 Trouble emerged for Curzon when he divided the largest administrative subdivision in British India, the Bengal Province, into the Muslim-majority province of Eastern Bengal and Assam and the Hindu-majority province of West Bengal (present-day Indian states of West Bengal, Bihar, and Odisha). Curzon's act, the Partition of Bengal—which some considered administratively felicitous, communally charged, sowed the seeds of division among Indians in Bengal and, which had been contemplated by various colonial administrations since the time of Lord William Bentinck, but never acted upon—was to transform nationalist politics as nothing else before it. The Hindu elite of Bengal, among them many who owned land in East Bengal that was leased out to Muslim peasants, protested fervidly. Following the Partition of Bengal, which was a strategy set out by Lord Curzon to weaken the nationalist movement, Tilak encouraged the Swadeshi movement and the Boycott movement.

No results under this filter, show 22 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.