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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a fervour" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong feeling of enthusiasm or passion about something.
Example: "She approached her work with a fervour that inspired her colleagues."
Alternatives: "a passion" or "an enthusiasm".
Exact(46)
Because it is a physical inertia of a system that devours resources with a fervour that grows without abatement.
He guards his and his family's privacy with a fervour that JD Salinger would have admired.
Given with a fervour that never fails, it's a guarantee of a great time.
Ayer gives his movie a fervour and energy which takes it beyond a videogame.
(Fraser Nelson, the editor of the Spectator, has a fervour for 1980s pop that is something to behold).
Fifty years ago students in Paris were rioting over social injustices with a fervour that brought workers out on strike.
Similar(14)
The colours, the scarves, the chants, the devotion to a particular rather than a general deity: a similar fervour could be found in India's religious crowds.
"As a nation we put a religious fervour into the NHS and care is seen as a second-class element.
As non-AIDS deaths contribute an increasing proportion of under-five deaths, addressing these with a similar fervour to that shown to HIV/AIDS is a vital next step for the national child survival agenda.
In 1817 she was sent to a convent in Paris, where she acquired a mystical fervour that, though it soon abated, left its mark.
Inside Germany, too, there is a widespread notion that the burden of history demands a particular fervour for European integration, no matter the cost.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com