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Sundarnaz Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Fear of favour

He decided every case brought to him by friend or foe with justice, without fear of favour.

I have searched the underlined phrase online and Google showed the results for 'without fear or favour'. Does the underlined phrase correct? If yes, what does it mean in the sentence?

Thanks.

  

Top answer

Yes, it's 'without fear or favour'. He decided every case brought to him by friend or foe with justice, impartially, fairly . Clive

  • Yes, it's 'without fear or favour'.
  • He decided every case brought to him by friend or foe with justice, impartially, fairly .
  • Clive
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1 Answers
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Yes, it's 'without fear or favour'.

He decided every case brought to him by friend or foe with justice, impartially, fairly.

Clive

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