Reluctant to go out, Rousselot said he felt feverish and nauseated, but his excuses were futile.
She was in the hospital and she was feverish and thought she was dying.
Just after his fall from power there began feverish movements of his personal fortune.
Already the noise in the trade press surrounding Windows NT 5.0 is building to a feverish pitch.
"No rain, and too much fighting, " was how one woman, holding another feverish child, summed it up.
Underwriters raced to get China Life ready, recognizing the feverish demand for shares in promising Chinese concerns.
Feverish competition among deep-pocketed corporations--especially Matsushita, NEC and Mitsubishi--has resulted in a plethora of tiny, innovative machines.
On Saturday feverish crowds in Colombo will watch the hosts, Sri Lanka, entertain Pakistan in a sell-out match.
Unfortunately, China is not the only nuclear state or wannabe that is engaged in a feverish build up.
But in contrast with the feverish talk of a week earlier, nobody was expecting an instant diplomatic miracle.
Some nights it felt as though the meeting were in fact an Off Off Broadway show, feverish, vital, undisciplined.
And the credits were first auctioned in December hardly a sign of feverish demand.
Politicians exploited tribal biases, working them to a feverish pitch, resulting in mayhem.
Lord Patten said there had been feverish negotiation on 11 November and he took advice from the BBC's lawyers.
Mr Howard's speech came against a background of feverish debate about the performances of the various the leadership contenders.
Since the summer, masked health officials have screened the country's airports, hauling some 800 feverish-looking visitors off to quarantine on arrival.
She became his secretary of state but is departing soon amid feverish speculation that she will run for president in 2016.
In select categories, namely seed and late stage, as well as the mobile and social sectors, investment activity became a bit feverish.
The Democrats need to slap themselves out of this feverish delirium (known as Chomsky-Krugman Syndrome), or their demise could harm the country.
Flu experts still don't know whether a significant number of patients are sick enough to spread the virus, despite not being feverish.
Yet, as Ben Johnson trenchantly observes, The grant-making institutions of the Left and their feverish recipients ultimately form an amorphous, leftist entity.
The buyout frenzy has led to a feverish level of spinning off.
His removal ushered in a less feverish approach to high-speed rail construction.
Quite a contrast to that feverish day nearly three years ago when another software outfit, Red Hat, rose 272% on its first day.
This combination of feeble production and feverish consumption, the argument runs, means that demand for commodities will outpace supply for years to come.
Some delegates do nothing but network with other delegates, oblivious to the feverish discussions going all around them about the post-crisis new reality.
Germany's feverish insistence that Brodsky stand trial in Germany is of a piece with its newfound appetite for waging political warfare against Israel.
The volume of Wal-Mart rants, and their feverish tone, is amazing when set against the paucity of words on the NEA's purported mission: education.
An estimated 70 million visits to clinics and hospital-emergency departments are made every year in the U.S. by parents concerned about a feverish child.
As for the police, they take a less feverish view of recent punishment beatings than do media pundits or the anguished relatives of victims.
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