deucedly

ADVERB
  1. (used as intensives) extremely
    deadly earnest
    deucedly clever
    deadly dull
    insanely jealous
    she was madly in love

How To Use deucedly In A Sentence

  • deucedly clever
  • You must be referring to yourself as a progressive in order to mock progressives, deucedly clever of you. Think Progress » Rep. Tom Perriello Tells ‘Spineless’ Senate To Get ‘Its Head Out Of Its Rear End’ And Confront Climate Crisis
  • That editorial judgment is not infallible is hardly news, but by the same token seeking to make editorial judgment actionable in a court of law is news ... and deucedly troublesome news at that. Ivan Katz: The Court Room Instead of the Concert Hall?
  • After a time, the doctor had me removed from the backboard (which is a deucedly painful thing to be strapped to, in case you ever have the dubious privilege), carted downstairs for x-rays, and finally, blessedly, sent home.
  • They are hard to manage because they are deucedly clever and lazy at the same time. The Last Empress
  • Women, you see — in certain matters, they have a deucedly keen intuition — The Master Builder
  • It was deucedly unpleasant, he decided, this being peppered at; and nonsensical as it really was, it was none the less deadly serious. Chapter 27
  • Then I made a fatal discovery - it is deucedly hard to throw the game, when the side rails are set up.
  • Gertrude, Ophelia, Polonius, Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, and all the rest must be feeling deucedly uncomfortable watching this scene, and the scene surrounding it - mighty opposites and all that.
  • Apart from being deucedly risky and explaining a great deal about the driving in Turkey, it's also an exact parallel of quantum mechanics.
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