1. A gun went off, and I heard a scream of fear from inside the room. 2. Decent citizens have nothing to fear from the police. 3. A man in my position has nothing to fear from a nobody like you. 4. Woodley argues that there is now considerable evidence that higher education has little to fear from an influx of mature students in terms of standards. 5. The decline of McCarthyism, moreover, meant that they had less to fear from the American right. 6. If he believes all that he says he does, surely he has nothing to fear from offering the Scottish people a multi-option referendum. 7. And London-based vice-chairwoman of Democrats Abroad, Sally McNulty, said Britain had nothing to fear from a Clinton presidency. 8. There is nothing to fear from this motion Congress, and it can only benefit the trade union movement. 9. Americans are thus facing the growing reality that they may have as much to fear from internal terrorism as from the exported kind. 10. And in handling an ensemble with a tricky preponderance of winds over strings, he had nothing to fear from any comparison. |