Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective
comparative form offiery : morefiery
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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For those who like their reunion albums fierier and more fraught, there's always Soundgarden, 2011, to look forward to.
Album review: Stone Temple Pilots, "Stone Temple Pilots" 2010
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An Acer owner will experience fiery new spring growth, calm summer foliage and even fierier autumn chilled leaves.
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A fierier generation — not hot enough, however, to set the fjord on flame — would celebrate the comparatively recent freedom of the country in numerous patriotic forms.
Henrik Ibsen 2008
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A fierier generation — not hot enough, however, to set the fjord on flame — would celebrate the comparatively recent freedom of the country in numerous patriotic forms.
Henrik Ibsen 2008
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You could use small green chillies to make it fierier and garnish with fresh coriander.
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Against black and green marbles at the end of the rather rococo chapel, the dark-red vestments of the festival of a martyr were in their turn a background for a fierier red; a red like red-hot coals; the rubies of the reliquary; the roses of St Dorothy.
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Against black and green marbles at the end of the rather rococo chapel, the dark-red vestments of the festival of a martyr were in their turn a background for a fierier red; a red like red-hot coals; the rubies of the reliquary; the roses of St Dorothy.
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It made our disappointment the fierier, after we had been on Earth for a time.
Explorations ANDERSON, Poul 1981
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The southern sky draws forth a vegetable world more luxuriant, fierier, spicier; the northern, a much duller, waterier, colder, and the men are so too, except where government and education have powerfully encroached.
The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 14, No. 398, November 14, 1829 Various
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Westerner, and blend it with the history and literature of my age, and conclude it with his death, it seems like some tragic play, superior to all else I know -- vaster and fierier and more convulsionary, for this America of ours, than Eschylus or Shakespeare ever drew for
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