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15 Sentences With "more ardently"

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

And what, in these increasingly authoritarian times, could be more ardently relevant than that?
Most wartime photographs were not quite so explicitly artistic as Easterly's; late in the century, photographers insisted more ardently that they were artists.
A country more ardently capitalist than most is asking itself, as seriously as at any time in the modern era, whether the ultrarich, just because they are ultrarich, endanger democracy.
While most polls suggest the remain campaign has a modest lead (will check before publication), one persistent concern has been that low turnout could skew the result in the direction of those who are more ardently opposed to the EU and hence more mobilized to vote.
"It's probably safe to say that there are no Americans more ardently opposed to Trump than African-Americans," said Eleanor Holmes Norton, the delegate to Congress from the District of Columbia, who argues that it is pointless to impeach Mr. Trump when the Republican-led Senate will not convict him.
The more > they multiply, the more friends you will have; the more ardently they love > liberty, the more perfect will be their obedience. Slavery they can have > anywhere. It is a weed that grows in every soil. They may have it from > Spain, they may have it from Prussia.
It is also celebrated in the summers, some days after Holi. However, Karthika month's Chhath is more ardently followed by people. Chhath Puja is celebrated at grand scale in Khajuraha. Villagers mostly celebrate Chhath Puja on Mani Kanth Jha's Pokhad but there are some other Pokhad also where Chhath puja are celebrated.
Trades Union Congress, "Obituary: E. W. Bussey", Annual Report of the 1957 Trades Union Congress, p.311 In 1941, the ETU's longstanding General Secretary, Jimmy Rowan, retired. Bussey was elected as his replacement, and also took over Rowan's place on the General Council of the Trades Union Congress. In his obituary, Walter Citrine noted that "he never pandered to the more ardently militant section" of the union.
The non-Holiness > segment, led by W. W. (William Wallace) Breckbill, took the more ardently > Fundamentalist position, aligning itself with the American Council of > Christian Churches, a Fundamentalist alliance. In this case, mutual > opposition to liberalism was not sufficient to make up for deep differences > over the doctrine of sanctification. Once the split took place, those > opposed to entire sanctification found themselves more comfortable in the > Fundamentalist camp. This story reproduces in miniature the general outline > of Fundamentalist-Holiness interaction.
At first, she feels disgusted, but after he kisses her, she feels herself becoming more ardently desiring to be held and compassionately loved by him. She admits that ever since she met the Prince, she realized she both hated and loved him. She asks him to ask for nothing more and to leave, taking his mystery with him. The Prince, however, then reveals his name: "Calaf, son of Timur – Calaf, figlio di Timur", thereby placing his life in Turandot's hands.
A number of saints and historical figures have followed and presented specific approaches to Christian meditation. Both Eastern and Western Christian teachings have emphasized the use of meditation as an element in increasing one's knowledge of Christ. The Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius of Loyola use meditative mental imagery, with the goal of knowing Christ more intimately and loving him more ardently. In The Way of Perfection, St. Theresa of Avila taught her nuns how to try to get to know Christ by using meditation and mental prayer.
Hamilton is keenly aware not only of his own bias, but also those of others. In fact, Federalist No. 1, as an introductory essay, can be interpreted mainly as an attempt to impress upon readers that opinions will always contain bias when it comes to important matters such as this. Hamilton writes: > Happy will it be if our choice should be directed by a judicious estimate of > our true interests, unperplexed and unbiased by considerations not connected > with the public good. But this is a thing more ardently to be wished than > seriously to be expected.
Henry Sidgwick longed for the fusion of ethics and rationality, and while Parfit admitted that many would avoid acting irrationally more ardently than acting immorally, he could not construct an argument that adequately united the two. Where self-interest puts too much emphasis on the separateness of persons, consequentialism fails to recognise the importance of bonds and emotional responses that come from allowing some people privileged positions in one's life. If we were all pure do-gooders, perhaps following Sidgwick, that would not constitute the outcome that would maximise happiness. It would be better if a small percentage of the population were pure do-gooders, but others acted out of love, etc.
As I watched, it began to undulate, to flow and ripple, > gradually and sensuously at first, then more and more ardently, until it was > rearing and thundering against the wall like an angry sea. I heard people > behind me groan and mutter, praying in their anguish and fear. Then my waist > was held by invisible hands and I was raised from the floor; at the height > of the roof I was turned slowly parallel with the ground and then released > so that I floated, immobile and face downwards, far above the people whose > faces I could make out in the half-dark as a grey blur, staring up at me. > After I had floated the length and breadth of the building I descended > quietly, of my own accord, and landed lightly on the spot from where I had > been taken, whereupon I walked directly out of the building without looking > back.
The Kerryman, his letter of October 12, 1925. This should have placated another anonymous begrudging correspondent self-described as “a lane dweller”, who writing two days beforehand libeled O’Donnell as “the Dictator of Basin View” where he lived, for simply querying the expectations of the Kerry County Council in inviting Dr. Mannix. It is clear that Denis O’Donnell had a more nuanced understanding of the background of Dr. Mannix, who in earlier times had demonstrated loyalty to Kings Edward VII in 1905 and George V in 1911, and not been that supportive of Home rule, but who years later became more ardently nationalist especially after he had been intercepted and arrested by British troops who boarded his vessel in 1920 while sailing from New York destined for Ireland, but then transferred to England to prevent his influence in Ireland. Mannix later became a life-long fried of Éamon de Valera.

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