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brutally

[ UK /bɹˈuːtə‍li/ ]
[ US /ˈbɹutəɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a vicious manner
    he was viciously attacked

How To Use brutally In A Sentence

  • In 2005, the Mugabe government launched what it called a slum clearance scheme, that bulldozed major shantytowns, brutally displacing hundreds of thousands of people. CNN Transcript Mar 24, 2007
  • He was brutally punished for his role in making an illicit radio receiver. Times, Sunday Times
  • The skyline is brutally impressive in the way cathedrals must once have been when nothing was taller. October « 2006 « Squares of Wheat
  • The peace of the island community had been brutally violated.
  • In his gardens and chariot-racing center, called the hippodrome, almost a thousand people were brutally murdered. Raw Story
  • My eyes stung brutally and I started to hiccup.
  • But you trusted entirely these rare moments of triumphant self-expression: every jink and turn by Diego Maradona at the 1986 World Cup was hard-won, brutally paid for and born out of absolute courage and commitment. World Cup 2010: How a love of Spain can make for a sterile affair
  • That metal dominates the list is not surprising: for getting "amped" there's no better soundtrack than reckless speed, brutally simple rhythm, and screamed anthems. Bob Moses: The Songs They Carried: Music at War
  • The brutally direct communications engendered by youthful, student audiences tend to endear them to dancers.
  • And when she was brutally knocked off of Washington's segregated streetcars, she denounced racism: "It is hard for the old slaveholding spirit to die, but die it must.
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