Sentence examples for a far more feared from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

The phrase "a far more feared" is not correct in standard English usage.
It can be used when comparing the level of fear associated with something, but it should be rephrased for clarity.
Example: "He is a far more feared opponent than anyone else in the league."
Alternatives: "much more feared" or "significantly more feared".

Exact(2)

Jeter has been a far more feared hitter over the last six weeks, although the exact starting point of his resurgence remains somewhat of a debate.

Jeter has been a far more feared hitter at the plate over the last six weeks, although the exact starting point of his resurgence remains somewhat of a debate.

Similar(58)

And what seemed like the horrifying opening offensive in a new and terrifying war stands instead as an isolated case — a passing moment when Al Qaeda seemed to rival fascism and Communism as a potential threat to our civilization, and when Osama bin Laden inspired far more fear and trembling than his actual capabilities deserved.

For though rabies kills many fewer people than malaria, it causes far, far more fear.

"The military grip has been suffocating," he told the Guardian, "and making someone vanish sows far more fear than spilling their blood".

SEOUL It may be called the Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), but at the moment the respiratory disease is spreading far more fear in East Asia than in the Middle East.

We shift back onto the topic of failure, which – according to Hoffman – is a far more deep-seated fear than merely panicking after a Lifetime Achievement ceremony.

And there's Israel, which utters scarcely a word about Syria as it fears that a far more intransigent regime might take its place.

I carried on taking the pill until fears of a far more terrifying conclusion to carnal impulses than pregnancy took over in the 1980s.

One true poet who fought fears in a far more profound and serious way was the first world war's great and tragic Wilfred Owen, who in a rather understated, stiff-upper lip way, puts it that "ambition may be defined as the willingness to receive any number of hits on the nose".

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie thinks this ban should include all Syrians, even young children orphaned by war, which is clearly a far more a tribally bigoted response to fear than an intelligent way to protect public safety.

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