Ferocity in a sentence as a noun

"Smaller tablets were bashed with ferocity. Until the iPad Mini, of course, when it was done "right".

Imagine a sport which combines the ferocity of grappling along with the strategy of chess.

Of course, I wouldn't like living the way they do, but given the ferocity of their defense against others, this goes the same for them.

And the hacker community would respond, with swift ferocity.

I'd be quite surprised if they went at this guy with anywhere near the ferocity they went after that idiotic IRS chief's testimony.

The ostensible idea is that speed and ferocity is needed to capture evidence before criminals can destroy it.

You will fight to the death to preserve your right to bear weapons,but any suggestion to make health care public and not let idiotic situations like this happen are fought with ferocity.

People wouldn't argue this topic with such ferocity if it wasn't for their appreciation of your work so far and high expectations for this project; please don't let that go to waste by shortcutting the decision process when you have come this far.

The mutual bloodshed is terrible, and, as a resident of Tel Aviv I'm personally affected, but there is one thing that has always perplexed me a bit, which is the perception of the actual ferocity of the conflict.

That "most of them have the good sense not to say so in public under their true identity" only makes it all the better - the argument is usually of such passion and ferocity that it must be confronted rather than sidestepped.

Reading about the Australian fires an interesting question comes to mind which is this, "If we engaged these fires at the outset with a constant suppression/extinguishing scheme, would they still get to the size and ferocity that they do today?

The first, is that the deer are coming at you in such quantities and ferocity that suppressive fire is needed, then you're going to need at least a platoon sized group here, possibly with airstrike backup, and well-coordinated plans for dealing with the cervine hordes.

And rather than showing shame, contrition, rather than being apologetic, Obama "welcomes the debate" about privacy, and prosecutes the whistleblower with a ferocity unmatched in living memory.

"[17] Economist Paul Krugman, argues that despite their "great ferocity in presenting its case and attacking its opponents", conservatives have resorted to "extraordinary series of attempts at statistical distortion".

Ferocity definitions

noun

the property of being wild or turbulent; "the storm's violence"

See also: fierceness furiousness fury vehemence violence wildness