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42 Sentences With "most fervently"

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

The most fervently pro-Trump members of Congress, such as Reps.
The lawmaker most fervently supporting this potentially disastrous decision, State Sen.
That's why the most fervently anti-Europe Unionists voted against Johnson's deal.
Google's map informs us that quinoa is the state's most fervently searched dish.
But those fighting most fervently for and against cultural policing missed the central point.
And the Republican Senators who most fervently compete for praise from the president have taken their cues.
But now this collective understanding is under assault by the very power that has championed it most fervently.
Why did they and their star sports labor lawyer Jeffrey Kessler not get the outcome they most fervently sought?
And right now, it seems more pressing than ever that we all support the causes we most fervently believe in.
That has not stopped the estranged siblings from speaking out about their sister, most fervently during the months leading up to her wedding.
Those most fervently opposed to immigration have pushed back against the rumored "softening" in his stance that he could articulate on Wednesday night.
It's no accident that things I love most fervently all hit peak popularity when I was at my most awkward, my least confident.
Rugby, versions of which were first played in the 1860s by expat Britons in Yokohama, has been most fervently played by the country's elite colleges.
At the time, the Bolsheviks were not the country's largest or most popular socialist party, but they were the most fervently certain of their own prophecies.
It was a love bordering on worship, fueled by longing, felt most fervently by those like my parents who grew up with America in their dreams.
The centerpiece of the N.R.A. annual convention this year was the endorsement of Donald Trump for President, the most fervently pro-gun nominee in Presidential history.
Mac Stipanovich, a Florida-based GOP strategist, asserted that ultimate passage of the legislation would hurt some of the poorer voters who had supported Trump most fervently.
The morning of the inauguration, on the National Lawn in Washington, DC, my photographer and I spoke to some of the people who believed most fervently in that story.
The candidate most fervently backing reparations, though, is Marianne Williamson, a self-help guru and spiritual adviser who wants to set aside $200 billion to $500 billion for a reparations program.
The pairing has been pushed most fervently by a third Republican senator, Mike Lee of Utah, an ally of both men who became the first senator to endorse Mr. Cruz this month.
The people who most fervently support him seem like they're going to do so despite almost anything that happens — even if those in his inner circle break the law, or, potentially, he does.
Complicating the debate was the fact that the most fervently anti-Trump elements in Silicon Valley seem to be the start-ups and venture capitalists, few of which were invited to the meeting.
The issue of impeachment here is inextricable from everything else that people believe in, from their loyalty to Trump to their hatred of Clinton and even the social issues they believe in most fervently.
These things are still a source of outrage for the most fervently pro-monarchy media outlets, like the Daily Mail, which has shelled out huge sums of money trying to discredit Harry's wife-to-be.
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren still have a decent shot at the Democratic presidential nomination, and that could set us up for the most fervently regulatory and corporate-skeptical presidential administration, of either party, in decades.
So while Mr. Johnson can become party leader by appealing to its most fervently ideological members, his own coalition can more easily ignore those voters, as they have done in halting their leader's hard-line Brexit strategy.
Ms. Salvant, 27, is the most fervently acclaimed jazz singer of her generation, and on her most recent album — "For One to Love," which won a Grammy this year — she deepened her game with a bouquet of original songs.
That approach might make sense if your strategy is simply focused on capturing the most eyeballs possible by any means necessary, but VR is still a fledgling technology that needs to lean on the users who support it the most fervently.
"It is expected that men will vote by platoons, in regular rank and file, according to party drilling, on this question of public faith," lamented Jeremiah Evarts, the missionary who battled most fervently and selflessly on behalf of the Cherokee.
That's because until intrepid journalists and courageous women managed to tear down Weinstein's protective wall of silence and intimidation, some may have dismissed the avalanche of scandals involving powerful and famous sexual predators as an assault against Republicans, or against the current president, or against Fox News, the television network that most fervently serves as his base of support.
Obama and Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE may have gotten cold feet about TPP, but Trump was most fervently opposed to it and withdrew from it as president.
That means that every time Trump chooses to use his Twitter platform to directly target someone he's angry with, he's not just putting them directly in front of his 17 million Twitter users; he's putting them directly in front of some of Twitter's most fervently bigoted users — ones whose culture of online harassment has created an environment in which they are more likely to dehumanize their targets and detach from the harm they cause.
A vow of silence is a vow to maintain silence. Although it is commonly associated with monasticism, no major monastic order takes a vow of silence. Even the most fervently silent orders such as the Carthusians have time in their schedule for talking. Recently, the vow of silence has been embraced by some in secular society as means of protest or of deepening their spirituality.
Around 1880 Sultan Abdul Hamid II reasserted the title as a way of countering Russian expansion into Muslim lands. His claim was most fervently accepted by the Muslims of British India. By the eve of World War I, the Ottoman state, despite its weakness relative to Europe, represented the largest and most powerful independent Islamic political entity. The sultan also enjoyed some authority beyond the borders of his shrinking empire as caliph of Muslims in Egypt, India and Central Asia.
The issue of Joyce's relationship with religion is somewhat controversial. Early in life, he lapsed from Catholicism, according to first- hand testimonies coming from himself, his brother Stanislaus Joyce, and his wife: > My mind rejects the whole present social order and Christianity—home, the > recognised virtues, classes of life and religious doctrines. ... Six years > ago I left the Catholic church, hating it most fervently. I found it > impossible for me to remain in it on account of the impulses of my nature.
Perverse subsidies are not tackled as robustly as they should be. Principally, this is because they become 'locked' into society, causing bureaucratic roadblocks and institutional inertia. When cuts are suggested many argue (most fervently by those 'entitled', special interest groups and political lobbyists) that it will disrupt and harm the lives of people who receive them, distort domestic competitiveness curbing trade opportunities, and increase unemployment. Individual governments recognise this as a 'prisoner's dilemma' – insofar as that even if they wanted to adopt subsidy reform, by acting unilaterally they fear only negative effects will ensue if others do not follow.
Until the 1620s Wroth was apparently "much addicted to mirth, levity, and music". However, he became a changed man in 1625–1626 after one of his parishioners, who had won a legal case in London and had instructed his family to arrange a feast on his return with music provided by Wroth, died on the road home. "Amidst the general consternation, Mr. Wroth cast away his violin, and falling on his knees in the midst of the company, most fervently prayed for the blessing of God upon this alarming providence.", Benjamin Brook, The Lives of the Puritans, 1813.
The Professional Football Researchers Association has recognized both sides of the debate. Jeffrey J. Miller, who coined the phrase "Staley Swindle" to describe the controversy, has argued most fervently that the All-Americans were wronged by the league's decision, which stands to the present day. Kenneth Crippen, in contrast, has noted that Buffalo's competition was not as stiff and that, overall, the Staleys had a better season when factoring in margins of victory and strength of schedule. Ultimately the legitimacy of Buffalo's claim to the title rests on whether the game in question was on or off the record.
Kasparov rose to the challenge with an excellent move picked from alternatives which would have let the World Team take a strong initiative. For instance, it was tempting to harass the black queen and possibly fianchetto the queen's bishop with 15.b3, but this would have invited the World Team to switch wings and initiate a attack with 15...Qh4. Or, to blindly follow the rule "never move a piece twice in the opening when you can develop another piece" with 15.Be3 would have allowed the World Team to play 15...Nd5, bringing the black knight to the square it most fervently wished to occupy.
Andrew was styled as ispán of Bánya (Árkibánya) ispánate on several occasions in the upcoming decaded (1258, 1262–1273, 1274, 1275), which laid as a border castle region in the territory of Nyitra County. Gýmeš (Gímes) Castle near present-day Jelenec, Slovakia, built by Andrew Hont- Pázmány During the civil war (1264–1265) between Béla IV and his son junior king Stephen, Andrew remained a partisan of the elderly monarch, but also tried to balance between the two parties, because he maintained good relationship with the entire Árpád dynasty. However, when Béla's daughter Duchess Anna and the royal general Henry Kőszegi occupied the fort of Patak (ruin near Sátoraljaújhely) and captured Stephen's wife, Elizabeth the Cuman and children, including the future Ladislaus IV in August 1264, Andrew sank into a delicate position. Stephen's family – Queen Elizabeth, their son and four daughters – were transferred to Turóc Castle under the guard of Andrew upon the order of Duchess Anna who most fervently opposed his brother's aspirations.
Booing of Hillary Transformed into Applause Adam Sandler's appearance as Operaman was a comic highlight of the evening. He sang a humorous song about the greatness of New York City, the end of Rudy Giuliani's term as mayor, the New York Yankees who were in the middle of playing in the 2001 ALCS, the musical acts that preceded him on stage (in which he mentioned that Destiny's Child gave him a "bone-ah"), and Osama bin Laden's cowardice, including the line "Osama says he's tough, Osama says he's brave/Then tell me why Osama is shitting in a cave!" Musically, the audience responded most fervently to The Who, roaring as they came on stage with a roiling "Who Are You", drowning out the band on the famous "It's only teenage wasteland" refrain of "Baba O'Riley," and reaching a peak of excitement with "Won't Get Fooled Again." The backdrop for the band consisted of an American flag alongside a British flag, showing solidarity.
Those who share Wiener's slant most prominently include Andrew Neil (editor of The Sunday Times in the 1980s and early 1990s), the American-based but British- raised Andrew Sullivan, the Canadian-born but U.S.-based Mark Steyn, the Times columnist and Tory MP Michael Gove, and most writers associated with The Economist (especially its Washington correspondent Adrian Wooldridge, who in 2004 likened the sort of British conservatives Wiener attacked to the leftist film-maker and polemicist Michael Moore, saying that old-school Tories dislike George W. Bush because he "represents an America where people believe in business, rather than dismissing it as a rather grubby pastime"). Among newspapers, The Sunday Times has been the most fervently Wienerite, very largely due to Andrew Neil's pervasive influence. Among Right-wing fringe groups, the Democracy Movement and other groups of Tory modernisers share most of Wiener's ideas on capitalist expansion and much of his contempt for the old guard in the party. Leading anti-Wienerites of the mainstream Right have included Peregrine Worsthorne (former editor of the Sunday Telegraph), the late Auberon Waugh, Max Hastings (former editor of The Daily Telegraph and Evening Standard) and Stuart Reid (assistant editor of The Spectator).

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