0 past simple and past participle of fare
1 to succeed or be treated in the stated way:
Low-paid workers will fare badly/well under this government.
In fact, many ballet-pantomimes fared better than the operas with which they were performed.
Compared to most of their urban counterparts, whose real incomes plummeted, farmers fared well.
Thus, homeless boys fared worse than squatters, but much better than villagers in terms of pathogen exposure.
This provides additional support for the argument that democracy has fared well in this part of the region.
These men fared worse even compared to men with low religious coping0practices and who did not report any diagnosis-related increase of religiosity.
For regional council elections, where women have fared very poorly, a first-past-the-post or winner-take-all method is used.
This opposite - externalization - fared quite well and merits further exploration.
On externalizing indices, females reported higher substance use and teacher-reported inattentiveness than males, yet fared better than males on delinquency and school grades.