单词 | fervour |
释义 | fervour (fɜːʳvəʳ ) regional note: in AM, use fervor uncountable noun Fervour for something is a very strong feeling for or belief in it. [formal] They were concerned only with their own religious fervour. Synonyms: ardour, passion, enthusiasm, excitement Quotations: Fervour is the weapon of choice of the impotentBlack Skins White Masks Collocations: ideological fervour After he became prime minister - first between 1998 and 2002, then again in 2010 - his ideological fervour dimmed. Times, Sunday Times I have always recoiled from people whose eyes shine with ideological fervour. Times, Sunday Times They can see the stunning scope of these festivals, the impressive logistical feats involved, the dominance of home-grown athletes, but they are not reacting with the same ideological fervour. Times, Sunday Times Their early correspondence - remarkably sophisticated for people barely out of adolescence - reflects their intellectual maturity and ideological fervour. The Times Literary Supplement Ideological fervour was expressed in jutting slabs, meaningless decks, relentless stairs, lifts and concealed entrances. The Times Literary Supplement And in a cheeky twist, you can see the nationality of your opponent - so you can compete with patriotic fervour. The Sun (2013) You're not tempted to stay and feel patriotic fervour? Times, Sunday Times (2012) Ditto any suggestion of patriotic fervour. The Times Literary Supplement (2012) Moreover, few other cities experienced the revolutionary fervour felt in Barcelona. The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution and Revenge But the content appeared to lack something of the revolutionary fervour that his audience had wanted. Times, Sunday Times (2006) Sports stars were instrumental in the first wave of revolutionary fervour. Times, Sunday Times (2012) Translations: Chinese: 热情 Japanese: 熱情 |
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