How To Use Abjectly In A Sentence
-
You can't have a show called Politically Incorrect and then abjectly apologize for not being PC.
-
she shrugged her shoulders abjectly
-
In his own way, Reilly has surrendered to out of state wowserism as abjectly as the Governor he seeks to unseat.
The Chimes at Midnight
-
Not that it was Daylight's way abjectly to beg and entreat.
Chapter XX
-
One form of communication we have failed in abjectly: that is in the teaching of languages.
What Has Happened to The American Dream?
-
It was for this reason the rector had so abjectly curled up, who still so abject curled up before She-who-was-Cynthia: because of his slave’s fear of her contempt, the contempt of a born-free nature for a base-born nature.
The Virgin and the Gypsy
-
Here is an unassuming straight-to-video-worthy horror flick which goes about its job with unimpeachable competence, never troubling to conceal how abjectly derivative and cliched it is.
-
But what leaves me sputtering in disbelief is that this unfathomably cynical attempt to subvert even the possibility of independent, truth-seeking media is being so abjectly, so supinely accepted.
March 2005
-
An exchange of cradle-babes, and the base-born slave may wear the purple imperially, and the royal infant begs an alms as wheedlingly or cringe to the lash as abjectly as his meanest subject.
CHAPTER 20
-
And in the penultimate of his thirty-six pages he confessed abjectly: ‘The evil of the unequal distribution is still to be solved.’
-
Oh! (_He fetches up two coins abjectly from his pocket_).
Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 104, April 1, 1893
-
But that was before Obama and the Democratic leadership went from awful to worse; before they got it into their heads that they got "shellacked" because they weren't "bipartisan" abjectly spineless enough and because the policies they were promoting were, believe it or not, too progressive.
Andrew Levine: Needed: A New Nader
-
Anyway, the point remains that Labour has abjectly failed to read the mood of the nation when it comes to tax cuts.
-
I remember one man they dragged out of a heap, who pleaded abjectly until a revolver shot cut him short.
Chapter 23: The People of the Abyss
-
Beyond doubt, the boy had broken the taboos, and privily he told him so, until Lamai trembled and wept and squirmed abjectly at his feet, for the penalty was death.
CHAPTER XIV
-
He said the State had abjectly failed the workers and their families, some 100,000 people.
-
Not only did the footballers perform abjectly, but their attitude was all wrong.
-
Just the first line of your last post was so utterly ludicrous and abjectly stupid I am ashamed to be the same species as someone as bone chillingly ignorant as you.
Think Progress » CBS Allows Focus On The Family Advocacy Ad During Super Bowl, But Bans Gay Dating Site Ad
-
By any intelligent standard, we are failing abjectly.
-
But, he was a very religious man so everyone had to shut up and let him have a job he was abjectly unqualified for because to do otherwise would be theocratically incorrect.
-
Thus it was amazing to me how quickly, faced with the possible loss of the most important person in the world, I overcame my puritan principles and called abjectly for help.
RutlandHerald.com
-
Now it is no more than a pathetic and abjectly partisan rag, not even worthy of tearing up and hanging in the outside dunny.
-
Instead, we are now "engaged" and abjectly dependent upon this fascist beast for so many or our essentials and for the support of our currency and fiscal recklessness.
-
Once before he had tried Spencer, and choosing the "Principles of Psychology" to begin with, he had failed as abjectly as he had failed with Madam Blavatsky.
Chapter 13
-
She was too gentle to tyrannize over her playfellow, yet she had ruled him abjectly, except when in canoe, or on horse or surf-board, at which times he had taken charge and she had rendered obedience.
ALOHA OE
-
Three days later they played abjectly in Croatia and lost 1-0.
-
About time all those who voted for him abjectly expressed their apologies to the coming generation of young citizens.
-
He was to live, it appeared, abominably worried, he was to live consciously rueful, he was to live perhaps even what a scoffing world would call abjectly exposed; but at least he was to live saved.
The Finer Grain