Sentence examples for feverish climate from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

In the rush to give restless, spoilt-for-choice modern viewers value for money, the studios are making their blockbusters in an ever more feverish climate.

The country's financial woes have arrived in a feverish climate of judicial investigations, lurid rumors and rising popular anger with politicians who keep their privileges while imposing spending cuts on other Italians.

In this feverish climate of merger and management restructure, he is now Professor of Immunology at St Bartholomew's and the Royal London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary.

Similar(57)

The backdrop to all this is London's feverish political climate, which the commissioner will have to negotiate.

In this feverish, hypercompetitive climate, it isn't easy for The Times to maintain its traditional principles, but as you point out, the struggle is surely worth the effort.

In the still-feverish post-riots climate with its "tough" policing fantasies and intellectual denial about the links between social disadvantage and crime, publishing facts that suggest some value in remedies to arson, theft and confrontations with cops other than firing water cannon salvos is asking to get rained on.

This fascinating book evokes the cultural climate -- the feverish idiom of the editorialists, the scramble among the fashionable for courtroom tickets -- that defined what the editors, James L. Swanson and Daniel R. Weinberg, suggest was a thoroughly commercialized and media-driven series of events.

This feverish, dreamlike state is the climate of desire in "Woodcuts of Women," and the stories explore it with language that is by turns jazzy, lyrical and impressionistic.

Increasing interest in and imitation of the culture of ancient Rome produced a climate in which feverish collecting of antiquities and ancient inscriptions even if only in fragmentary form flourished.

Yvo de Boer's prescription sounds rather a modest goal to me, but is perhaps a sign of how far ambition has fallen since the feverish days ahead of the Copenhagen climate change summit in December 2009.

Panic, in economics, acute financial disturbance, such as widespread bank failures, feverish stock speculation followed by a market crash, or a climate of fear caused by economic crisis or the anticipation of such crisis.

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