0 present participle of fare
1 to succeed or be treated in the stated way:
Low-paid workers will fare badly/well under this government.
Observers saw unresolved women as faring worse in their relationships, but questionnaires did not detect these differences.
How are doctors faring, and what are the pressures on them?
I have the long-standing hope that you are faring well, and advancing in the prosperity of days, and interceding for me.
Economically, however, both adolescent-onset men and women were not faring well.
Following conventions, we asked for evaluations of how the system is performing in general (sociotropic judgements) and specifically how the respondent was faring (egocentric judgements).
A successful method for determining longitude would bring stability to the nations' sea faring enterprises, commercial and military.
Perversely, the trend towards medium and larger sized homes faring better under new policy conditions, appears to conflict with the spirit of care in the community.
He thinks that there is something good about saints faring better than sinners, even if this entails that saints will have more than they deserve in absolute terms.