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70 Sentences With "more fervent"

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

Stans are much more fervent — and much more rabid.
As Swift's internet presence diminished, the rumors grew more fervent.
Their faith in Nazism's ultimate triumph grew all the more fervent.
But outside the convention hall, protests were far louder and more fervent.
Trump's critics were much more fervent in their opinions than his supporters.
Instead, you see Democrats who were lukewarm supporters suddenly becoming more fervent proponents.
It's a vicious cycle: The more Bitcoin plummets, the more fervent and delirious people get.
But as anticipation for American Dirt grew more fervent ahead of its release, so did the criticism.
But as other seekers of clicks discovered, Mr. Trump's supporters were far more fervent than Mrs. Clinton's.
To more fervent Brangelina fans, Pitt and Jolie are good parents, good people, a good husband and wife.
This is not a topic on which the more fervent carbon tax advocates have showered themselves with glory.
It's a shame, because there's no place in the U.S. more fervent in its hockey fandom—sorry, Minnesota.
Among the more fervent Cold Warriors, Canada was often seen as a weak link in the battle against Bolshevism.
And when it comes to fans, it's hard to imagine any more fervent than those that love Star Wars.
Musk's fringe is different because the center is morally righteous, which means the outliers are even more fervent than other fandoms.
Should he have just waited in the parking lot and given his ticket to someone more fervent with a shorter reading list?
Several Tories have openly floated the idea of replacing her as prime minister, preferably with a more fervent believer in Brexit (see article).
Some of the more fervent pro-Europeans – such as the thousands who protested Brexit on Saturday – still hope the decision can be overturned.
Her announcement this week could appeal to more fervent supporters of Mr. Sanders, whose base Ms. Warren has been seeking to win over.
The chicken is spatchcocked, flattened, smeared with marinade and then settled in the garlicky bath overnight, where it grows more fervent with each hour.
Enthusiasm is more fervent at the ideological edges of each party, with 24.3% of liberal Democrats and 56% of conservative Republicans deeply enthusiastic vs.
And for every moderate or casual Trump-leaner he may lose by fighting, he could easily be gaining the more fervent support from his base.
Bathrobe, available on Snowe, $98Snowe's $98 unisex bathrobe has been called the best and most absorbent terry robe on the market, and I'm just one more fervent believer.
"Fun Home" was a hit in New York, but it couldn't be more fervent in attacking the hypocrisies of small town Pennysylvania, from which its rebellious heroine escapes.
That creative breakthrough allowed shows to aim for smaller but more fervent audiences, to traffic not in quirky heroes but in flawed Everymen prone to depression and savagery.
Bathrobe, available on Snowe, $98Snowe's $98 unisex bathrobe has been called the best and most absorbent terry robe on the market, and I'm just one more fervent believer.
Naysayers voice the more fervent views, as roughly twice as many U.S. adults say they are not satisfied at all with democracy as say they are very satisfied.
It not only held its own; the response the show received seemed more fervent and passionate than even Game of Thrones was able to muster during its Friday presentation.
"Couple that with an IPO market that'll be more fervent than we've seen this year, and I think you're setting up for a very nice start to 2017," he added.
I wouldn't go so far as to say Wednesday's more fervent, higher-stakes performances tarnished the original efforts from weeks ago; I just wish we could have heard new material.
I do not know whether the president's recent actions will damage his reputation among his more fervent supporters, although there is some indication that their opinion of him is souring.
Nowhere have these attacks been more fervent than among the foreign-aid community, who would carve-out international food aid shipments from cargo preference rules, promoting foreign fleets over our own.
Dean Zerbe, a former Finance Committee aide who now works at Alliantgroup, said he could see a "more fervent effort" from Republicans on tax reform as a result of the healthcare challenges.
Sometimes teams will hold a block of tickets, knowing they can sell them at a premium to the more fervent visiting-team fan groups, like those of the Giants and the Philadelphia Eagles.
In other words, even if Modi had come out and said, "Yeah, I actively supported the riots," most of his supporters would not have cared -- or worse, become even more fervent in backing him.
Instead, Buttigieg has seen a steady growth in support from senior citizens, with polls showing that the age group is, in some cases, more fervent in their Buttigieg support than voters closer to the mayor's age.
A familiar ballet ensues: the victim's history of drug infractions preoccupy the media, an aggrieved community marches in protest and a grand jury declines to indict the officer, which leads to more and more fervent agitation.
At the same time, the Republican base has become more fervent in its support for Israel — 87 percent of Republicans sympathize with Israel, up from 59 percent in 2001, according to a Gallup poll conducted last March.
Whatever President Trump tweets, this would seem to fall squarely into the category of collusion — which may explain why some of the president's more fervent supporters have begun suggesting that any help Russia provided in defeating Mrs.
One Western source briefed on the talks suggests that the Taliban leadership might struggle to sell to its more fervent rank-and-file the notion of only a partial American withdrawal during the early stages of the deal.
Mr Trump, who promised to drain the swamp and won the presidency after an openly nativist campaign, then stocked his administration with Goldman Sachs alums, including Mr Cohn, whom Mr Trump's more fervent supporters derided as "Globalist Gary".
Despite a more fervent push from members in her caucus this week to open an impeachment inquiry, Pelosi continues to argue to Democrats that impeachment is "divisive" and the House is already on a steady course with their investigations.
Barrow, a grey-bearded 53-year-old, was once "our man in Moscow" before being parachuted into Brussels in January after the abrupt resignation of his disgruntled predecessor; he had rubbed May's more fervent pro-Brexit allies up the wrong way.
Many critical of both Pope John Paul II and Benedict XVI's sluggish pace in addressing the issue were hopeful that Pope Francis would prove a far more fervent ally when it came to contending with the church's legacy of sex abuse.
But I don't think our polarized system lends itself to salt-the-earth defeats anymore, and I also don't think that parties necessarily emerge from them wiser than before — since in such defeats they're condensed to their more fervent and often foolish core.
The character of Howard Beale — who is transformed into a populist sensation after he threatens to commit suicide on live television, and whose audience grows bigger and more fervent as his grasp on reality becomes more tenuous — remains his most famous creation.
The details of the story grow a bit technical — a tussle over the seating of black delegates at the Democratic convention takes up a lot of time — but Mr. Cranston keeps it watchable with a performance that grows ever more fervent but never goes over the top.
That could translate into fury on Twitter, even more volatile reactions to key global controversies and ever more fervent attempts to change the subject -- emotions that often translate into diatribes against top targets such as Attorney General Jeff Sessions or special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe.
Baumgartner, 1985, p. 312. On February 7, on the sixty-first scrutiny of the conclave, Del Monte was "unanimously" elected and took the name Pope Julius III (forty-one cardinals had previously acquiesced to his candidacy, although the more fervent of the Imperialists had not until it was already inevitable).
He claimed he allowed Thi to return to his old area of command as a goodwill gesture, to keep central Vietnamese happy, and because he promised Thi a farewell visit before going into exile. Thi received a rousing reception and the anti-Kỳ protesters became more fervent. Kỳ then sacked the police chief of Huế, a Thi loyalist.
One of the more fervent monks appointed by Abuna Yakob was Abba Ewostatewos (c. 1273–1352). Ewostatewos designed a monastic ideology stressing the necessity for isolation from state influences. He insisted that the people and the Church return to the teachings of the Bible. Ewostatewos’s followers were called Ewostathians or Sabbatarians, due to their emphasis on observing the Sabbath on Saturday.
What I do regret is that I was young and fairly naïve > in the ways of the media. I didn't grasp the fact that no one understood my > motives and that everyone would make assumptions. Had I known that up front > I would have been much more fervent in explaining my motivations. I had no > animus and I had no malice in my heart.
Arthur Smith Woodward dismissed the Taung Child as having "little bearing" on the issue of "whether the direct ancestors of man are to be sought in Asia or Africa". The critiques became more fervent a few months later. Elliot Smith concluded that the Taung fossil was "essentially identical" to the skull of "the infant gorilla and chimpanzee". Infant apes appear more human like because of the "shape of their forehead and the lack of fully developed brow ridges".
Maria Amalia was also a patron of the composer Gian Francesco Fortunati, a favorite at the Neapolitan court. She was criticized for being too religious from what was proper from someone not a member of a Catholic monastic order: she attended mass twice and eventually four times a day and kept more devotions than what was normal for a nun or a monk, and he eventually lectured her that she was more fervent than what could be regarded as modest for a lay person.
The Tocqueville effect (also known as the Tocqueville paradox) is the phenomenon in which as social conditions and opportunities improve, social frustration grows more quickly. The effect is based on Alexis de Tocqueville's observations on the French Revolution and later reforms in Europe and the United States. Another way to describe the effect is the aphorism "the appetite grows by what it feeds on". For instance, after greater social justice is achieved, there may be more fervent opposition to even smaller social injustices than before.
David Rausch writes that the change "signified far more than a semantical expression—it represented an evolution in the thought processes and religious and philosophical outlook toward a more fervent expression of Jewish identity." The MJAA was and still is an organization of individual Jewish members. In 1986 the MJAA formed a congregational branch called the International Alliance of Messianic Congregations and Synagogues (IAMCS). In June 1979 nineteen congregations in North America met at Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania and formed the Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations (UMJC).
He also wrote a number of Christian books. He was instrumental in educating his sister in theological matters emphasizing an evangelical faith that influenced Caroline and others of her family to abandon their "high-and-dry" religious convictions for a more fervent evangelical piety. Caroline Fry's conversion experience as a young adult in 1822 is recorded in her Autobiography, as inserted as an introduction to her book entitled, Christ Our Example. Fry has produced an impressive list of publications over her life as listed below.
Koizumi continues to reaffirm the principles in each of his addresses for the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Peace Memorial Ceremonies.Address by Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi at the Hiroshima Memorial Service, 6 August 2005. More fervent criticism of Japan's non-nuclear policy has come from a few well-known academics and writers, including Kyoto University professor Terumasa Nakanishi and literary critic Kazuya Fukuda (who penned the article "A nuclear declaration for Japan" for Voice magazine). The majority of writers and scholars, however, tend to support non-nuclearism.
Perhaps because Artabasdos' usurpation was interconnected with the restoration of veneration of images, Constantine now became perhaps an even more fervent iconoclast than his father. Constantine's derogatory epithet Kopronymos ("Dung-named": from kopros, "feces" or "animal dung"; and onoma, "name"), was applied to him by his avowed enemies over this extremely emotional issue, the iconodules. Using the obscene name they spread the rumour that, as an infant, he had defecated in his baptismal font, or the imperial purple cloth with which he was swaddled.
During the 18th century, appreciation of Bashō's poems grew more fervent, and commentators such as Ishiko Sekisui and Moro Nanimaru went to great length to find references in his hokku to historical events, medieval books, and other poems. These commentators were often lavish in their praise of Bashō's obscure references, some of which were probably literary false cognates. In 1793 Bashō was deified by the Shinto bureaucracy, and for a time criticizing his poetry was literally blasphemous. In the late 19th century, this period of unanimous passion for Bashō's poems came to an end.
She was devoted to Catholicism and especially venerated Saint Francis Xavier and was actively involved in the building of the Catholic Hofkirche in Dresden. Her personal confessor, the Jesuit Fr. Anton Hermann, criticized her for being too religious from what was proper for someone not a Catholic religious order member. She attended mass twice and eventually four times a day and kept more devotions than was normal for a nun or a monk. Fr. Anton Hermann eventually lectured her that she was more fervent than could be regarded as modest for a lay person.
However, towards the end of the 10th century the ravages of pestilence, combined with the greed of its patrons and the laxity of the community, brought it to ruin. In 988 a severe plague devastated the neighbourhood and carried off sixty of the monks including the abbot, Hartfried. Only a dozen were left to elect a successor, and they divided into two parties. The more fervent chose one Conrad, whose election was confirmed by the Bishop of Speyer, but some of the others, who favoured a more relaxed rule, elected an opposition abbot in the person of Eberhard, the cellarer.
God was now a ruler, and religion would be more fervent and emotional. Thus, the ensuing revival of Augustinian theology, stating that man cannot be saved by his own efforts but only by the grace of God, would erode the legitimacy of the rigid institutions of the church meant to provide a channel for man to do good works and get into heaven. Humanism, however, was more of an educational reform movement with origins in the Renaissance's revival of classical learning and thought. A revolt against Aristotelian logic, it placed great emphasis on reforming individuals through eloquence as opposed to reason.
One evening as they were talking, and Chūnagon was "affectionately" listening to Saishō's love problems, Saishō embraces Chūnagon, and tells the Chūnagon that he loves 'him', thinking she is a man. The Chūnagon becomes angry with Saisho and tells him off, but Saishō only becomes more fervent in his embrace, and discovers the Chūnagon is a woman. Chūnagon then loses her courage - though she remains cold, she no longer actively resists him. The ending has been called "surprisingly dark" by The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature, although it does not expand on this line of thought.
Bloch was proud of his family's history of defending France: he later wrote, "My great-grandfather was a serving soldier in 1793; ... my father was one of the defenders of Strasbourg in 1870 ... I was brought up in the traditions of patriotism which found no more fervent champions than the Jews of the Alsatian exodus". Bloch was a committed supporter of the Third Republic and politically left wing. He was not a Marxist, although he was impressed by Karl Marx himself, whom he thought was a great historian if possibly "an unbearable man" personally. He viewed contemporary politics as purely moral decisions to be made.
In 1607, he began work on a new residential triangle, Place Dauphine, lined by thirty-two brick and stone houses, near the end of the Île de la Cité. A third square, Place de France, was planned for a site near the old Temple, but was never built. The assassination of Henry iV by a Catholic fanatic while his carriage was blocked on rue de la Ferronnerie Place Dauphine was Henry's last project for the city of Paris. The more fervent factions of the Catholic hierarchy in Rome and in France had never accepted Henry's authority, and there were seventeen unsuccessful attempts to kill him.
Gaveston was a relative upstart, and was seen as arrogant by the established nobility. He was considered to have far too much influence over the king, and had already been exiled once by Edward I. Matters were made worse by the fact that it was the earldom of Cornwall he was given, as this earldom had long been thought of as inalienable from the crown. Thomas of Lancaster gradually emerged as the leader of the opposition against the king, particularly after the death of the old and esteemed Henry de Lacy, who had up until then been a moderating force. Lancaster's closest associate was the earl of Warwick, who was even more fervent in his antagonism than Lancaster.
While the process was widely hailed by international observers and non-governmental organizations, the actual National Dialogue was decried by more fervent unionists as betraying elements of the Tunisian working poor. In particular, the inclusion of UTICA, at a juncture when Tunisians were embattled in a fight for wage increases, seemed to certain union activists and working class as reneging on its duty to its membership. Another critique that has often been put forth regarding the Quartet is that it enabled further foreign investment, donor aid, and international economic support at a time when Tunisia was seeking wholesale independence. When the ANC had been suspended in September 2013 and protests were widespread, often centered around Bardo palace, the IMF decided to withhold a loan package of $1.7 billion.
Southey said that, "no age ever provided a man of more fervent piety or more perfect charity, and no church ever possessed a more apostolic minister." His fame was not confined to his own country, for it is said that Voltaire, when challenged to produce a character as perfect as that of Christ, at once mentioned Fletcher of Madeley. There remains to date no complete edition of his Works, although varying editions of collections of his writings were first published after his death, first in 1795, with subsequent editions in 1806, 1822, 1836, 1859–60, 1873, and 1883 (among others, including a twentieth-century reprint by Schmul Publishers). The chief of his published works, written against Calvinism, were his Five Checks to Antinomianism, Scripture Scales, and his pastoral theology, Portrait of St Paul.
"[O]n 17 February 1952 ... an abridged version of the play was performed in the studio of the Club d'Essai de la Radio and was broadcast on [French] radio ... [A]lthough he sent a polite note that Roger Blin read out, Beckett himself did not turn up."Knowlson, James, Damned to Fame: The Life of Samuel Beckett (London: Bloomsbury, 1996), pp. 386, 394 Part of his introduction reads: The play was first published in September 1952 by Les Éditions de Minuit and released on 17 October 1952 in advance of the first full theatrical performance; only 2500 copies were printed of this first edition. On 4 January 1953, "[t]hirty reviewers came to the générale of En attendant Godot before the public opening ... Contrary to later legend, the reviewers were kind ... Some dozen reviews in daily newspapers range[d] from tolerant to enthusiastic ... Reviews in the weeklies [were] longer and more fervent; moreover, they appeared in time to lure spectators to that first thirty-day run"Cohn, Ruby, From Desire to Godot (London: Calder Publications; New York: Riverrun Press), 1998, pp. 153, 157 which began on 5 January 1953 at the Théâtre de Babylone, Paris.

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