With a certain degree of febrility, she starts up the laptop. |
|
It is less good at capturing the special febrility of American social and political life during Nixon's first term. |
|
Sienna Miller is sleekly anguished as an actress on the brink of leaving her pilot husband, but her greyhound febrility is a minor note. |
|
This most often staged of the three plays gains febrility and harshness when seen alongside the earlier works. |
|
There certainly will be some febrility in the air to hear a work by the Canadian Mozart in the hall that now bears his name. |
|
But this is really just a symptom of the man's emotional febrility. |
|
There was a discretion to her febrility which was really good. |
|
This week he's a hero, after his plan was welcomed by a grateful stock market – an institution whose current febrility is mirrored by the media. |
|
It also compounds the Brexit-induced febrility in financial markets. |
|
In the case of febrility, when the temperature before the injection is 39.5 degrees C, it can rise to 41.5 C and even remain for six consecutive hours at 41 degrees C without the slightest inconvenience. |
|
I cannot really describe my emotion when I received the object, I have mostly spent my time watching it from every angles, out of curiosity and febrility also. |
|
With large energetic gestures, he conjures the dynamism of nature into being, where matter dances, becomes alive and establishes itself as if erupting from a moment of febrility. |
|