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Перевод: fervent speek fervent


[прилагательное]
горячий; жаркий; пылающий; пылкий; пламенный; воодушевленный


Тезаурус:

  1. (" Cardinal York', as he became known, was a fervent believer in the Stuart cause and eventually called himself Henry IX, but plays little further part in the invasion story.)
  2. However, it also leant heavily on the opinions of people like Alexander Graham Bell who were fervent supporters of the Pure Oral Method, and even Dr. David Buxton who managed to get in a recommendation on his pet subject, that intermarriage of deaf people should be discouraged (see Chapter 5).
  3. She became fervent.
  4. He was a fervent high-churchman but abhorred any association between the high-church wing of the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church.
  5. The island had responded particularly to the fervent missionary work of the itinerant Baptist preachers in the early years of the century.
  6. And show the fervent, of capacious souls,
  7. A fervent supporter of Home Rule, he had converted to the Roman Catholic faith.
  8. His attachment to the Church of England was fervent, despite the embarrassment of marriage to an equally ardent Roman Catholic.
  9. "I seldom come out of my pulpit", said Baxter, "but my conscience smiteth me that I have been no more serious and fervent
  10. This is some of the best and most fervent writing sport has seen.
  11. This can lead to fervent acceptance or rejection uninformed by understanding, the imposition of one mode of thinking on another.
  12. Eccleshall himself implicitly acknowledges this problem, for he notes at one point that Thatcherism's characteristics - "its mixture of abrasively theoretical market economics, uncompromising anti-egalitarianism and fervent patriotism" - are hardly "the ingredients of what Oakeshottians judge to be authentic Conservatism".
  13. The initial tendency, on the part of both government and public, to assume that the Jacobite adventure would soon peter out, was replaced, as the news of the fall of Edinburgh and Cope's defeat at Prestonpans sank in, by feelings of outrage and alarm, which were soon expressed in a fervent outburst of patriotism.

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