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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fierce events" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe events that are intense, powerful, or characterized by strong emotions or actions.
Example: "The fierce events of the past year have shaped our community in ways we never anticipated."
Alternatives: "intense occurrences" or "violent incidents".
Exact(1)
Photographs of extreme situations frequently carry with them an aura of derring-do, of danger and unbearable emotion outside the fierce events they picture.
Similar(57)
Some 40,000 people died because of that eruption — it was a much more fierce event, and in a much more populated place.
That form must be maintained and, beyond that, internal competition is exceptionally fierce for every event.
He kept things together so long as he was alive, and look what happens now he has gone!'" I can still remember how weirdly disorienting it was to read this in 1993, when the blaze of contemporary events was fierce enough to make one wonder if she was writing not about Franz Josef, but Tito.
This covers the full gamut, from seismic events, to fierce winds, heavy snow, extreme temperatures, and severe rainfall.
Weather The Miami Hurricanes are named after a fierce and destructive weather event, something that only the unaffected could ever consider anything other than just plain awful.
The company said it had no plans to cut staff, while unions vowed "fierce resistance" in the event of threats to jobs and conditions.
There's no doubt that North Korea would put up a fierce fight in the event of a war," said Fitzpatrick. .
The organizers of the latter event met fierce criticism this year for inviting uniformed police officers to a march that includes queer and trans people of color, who are disproportionately affected by police violence and mass incarceration.
Eastwood considers recent events with a fierce anger even as he considers the universal span of human experience with an Olympian ruefulness.
The US Olympic trials are notoriously difficult, with competition for places in some athletics and swimming events almost as fierce as the Olympics themselves.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com