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the vigour
noun
Active strength or force of body or mind; capacity for exertion, physically, intellectually, or morally; force; energy.
synonyms
Exact(60)
Yet the vigour of Indian democracy stands against the extremists.
The vigour of the Tory 2010ers is no coincidence.
The book throbs with the vigour of vernacular Scots speech.
His campaign did not show the vigour needed to win media coverage for a third party.
None of his contemporaries or immediate successors was able to match the vigour of his verse.
For locals in Yulin the vigour with which welfare groups have attacked their tradition is puzzling.
You would not guess it from the vigour of his campaigning.
His actual power, however, varied with the vigour of the sultans.
The vigour of the secular theatre was offset by a lack of permanent playhouses.
The music I could take or leave, though there's no denying the vigour of its performance.
But in her nurturing embrace I struggle to regain the vigour of past form.
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