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damnably

[ UK /dˈæməbli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a damnable manner
    kindly Arthur--so damnably, politely, endlessly persistent!

How To Use damnably In A Sentence

  • So you, the Mail on Sunday, and all-comers are entitled to join those paragons at ConHome in assuming that one of the leading UK lawyers is perjured, unquestionably, damnably and utterly? Pressure on Baroness Scotland after new revelations
  • Far be it from me to suggest that, at the end of a parliament, the papers might like to review their own performance in the damnably tricky business of reporting faithfully the news.
  • “He was a tall, handsome, bold man; but his naeve was that he was damnably proud. Kenilworth
  • It is then things take a further turn towards the damnably unideal. Times, Sunday Times
  • The game itself is damnably fast. Times, Sunday Times
  • Extra weight becomes damnably hard to shed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Any suggestion that he was racist was 'damnably false', he said. Times, Sunday Times
  • “Goodness, you people get up damnably early,” Etheredge said, trying to shake himself awake. Exit the Actress
  • Brattles; -- and then there was the fact that Carry Brattle, who had been regularly "subpoenaed," had kept herself out of the way, -- most flagitiously, illegally and damnably. The Vicar of Bullhampton
  • Why do some people make such a damnably disgusting munching sound when they eat that can be heard miles away?
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