Shopping any where in the world seems to become more fraught every year. [adjective]
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Working down the mines was fraught with danger for everyone. [adverb]
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The field of imperial education was more fraught with contradictions than most for the lady imperialists. [adverb]
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But Carne, in another moment, thought that the man who had passed must be Scudamore, probably fraught with hot tidings. [adjective]
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The immediate future, it is true, can hardly bring the final crash, but it is fraught with important consequences to us. [adjective]
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The descent into Dover's lower town from the downs above is fraught with considerable danger for the automobilist. [adjective]
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Meantime do thou, good brother of Salisbury, go to our consort's tent, and tell her that Blondel has arrived, with his budget fraught with the newest minstrelsy. [adjective]
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Orestes was Iphigenia's brother, and Pylades her cousin, and their object in undertaking an expedition fraught with so much peril, was to obtain the statue of the Taurian Artemis. [adjective]
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Meanwhile, councils went on in the kitchen at home, fraught with almost insupportable aggravation to my exasperated spirit. [adjective]
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Marius was dazzled by those eyes fraught with rays and abysses. [adjective]
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Two ragged pedestrians exchanged these remarkable replies, fraught with evident Jacquerie: "Who governs us." [adjective]
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