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How To Use Dreadfully In A Sentence

  • I don't think they play at all fairly," Alice began, in rather a complaining tone, "and they all quarrel so dreadfully one can't hear oneself speak and they don't seem to have any rules in particular; at least, if there are, nobody attends to them -- and you've no idea how confusing it is all the things being alive; for instance, there's the arch I've got to go through next walking about at the other end of the ground -- and I should have croqueted the Queen's hedgehog just now, only it ran away when it saw mine coming! Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
  • It is dreadfully sad to reflect that he grew up in such a short time and in such tragic circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • I do feel dreadfully sad, Marilla. Anne of Green Gables
  • It made me feel dreadfully insignificant. Anne of Green Gables
  • Anna's arm hurt dreadfully, worse than when she'd fallen off the top of the climbing frame at the nursery.
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  • It features dreadfully long and boring ‘action’ sequences comprised mostly of repeating footage of men firing pistols in the dark.
  • This heat seems to have had a dreadfully enervating effect on everyone.
  • That would be a great pity, because they are all lovely people and we shall miss them dreadfully.
  • I love my job, relish the operational role and will no doubt miss it dreadfully.
  • What went so dreadfully wrong? The Collins History of the World in the 20th Century
  • I know it has been so long since I wrote, and I am so dreadfully sorry.
  • Sometimes things go dreadfully wrong but then you can get some wonderful surprises. The Sun
  • They have been stuttering along, playing dreadfully away from home and struggling to get the best out of their superstars. The Sun
  • No one doubts both parents have both suffered dreadfully. The Sun
  • To observe that something precious has been lost, covered over, and denied is regarded as dreadfully unsophisticated.
  • I was dreadfully shocked at the burning of the two Jews, and the honest Biscayan who married his godmother; but how great was my surprise, my consternation, and concern, when I beheld a figure so like Pangloss, dressed in a sanbenito and mitre! Candide
  • Dreadfully did my heart then misgive me: I was ready to faint. Clarissa Harlowe
  • Emma will be dreadfully missed and all the school hold her family in their thoughts and prayers during this dreadful time.
  • She played a woman physically allergic to shirts with sleeves, but terminally addicted to acid shades of lippie that clashed dreadfully with her chosen hair dye.
  • These holier-than-thou guardians of free speech are practically creaming with self-righteous glee as they publicly lynch this young woman for saying something dreadfully stupid that she undoubtedly deeply regrets. The Volokh Conspiracy » Judging a Person Based on a Single Forwarded Personal E-Mail
  • In actuality it came from the name of a bird - the Willow inker - that had a dreadfully loud caw, not to mention a terrible unaccommodating personality, and happened to live in a willow tree.
  • Surely honesty, sobriety, and steadiness must have grown dreadfully scarce qualities, that one puts up with such a cook; especially as her cooking is as careless as the rest of her doings. Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle
  • My aunt indulges the children dreadfully.
  • I am dreadfully sorry for what happened in the boat today.
  • They were dreadfully frightened, but at last one laid down his assagai and by degrees in about an hour approached my Kafir. The Autobiography of Liuetenant-General Sir Harry Smith, Baronet of Aliwal on the Sutlej, G. C. B.
  • It'll seem dreadfully confusing at first in fact, but it works very well in the end and effectively squeezes the full commands of a mouse and keyboard into an N64 joypad with style.
  • It made me feel dreadfully insignificant. Anne of Green Gables
  • Her multi-dimensional character Denise is burdened with dreadfully stereotypical parents: the obstinate dad who wants her only to be a concert pianist, and the demure, subservient mom who finally speaks her mind at the totally expected moment. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • Opposite, another young lawyer, Eugene Fort, was saying preternaturally bright things to Tiny, who lifted her sweet orbs at intervals and remarked: "How _dreadfully_ clever you are, Mr. Fort; I am _so_ afraid of you!" or "How _sweet_ of you to think I am worth all those _real_ epigrams! The Californians
  • The individual cases will be compelling: of people forced to suffer dreadfully. Times, Sunday Times
  • other people's dreams are dreadfully wearisome
  • It can be difficult when you miss your child all day to find they behave dreadfully when they get home.
  • My 20-year-old self would have been dreadfully disappointed at this lack of ambition. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although many times Sara had heard her say how dreadfully awful his company was.
  • In the morning, feeling dreadfully crapulous, she managed to make herself presentable in time for work. SORT OF RICH
  • Dreadfully overcrowded trains and frequent cancellations made commuting an ordeal.
  • 'I don't think they play at all fairly,' Alice began, in rather a complaining tone, 'and they all quarrel so dreadfully one can't hear oneself speak -- and they don't seem to have any rules in particular; at least, if there are, nobody attends to them -- and you've no idea how confusing it is all the things being alive; for instance, there's the arch I've got to go through next walking about at the other end of the ground -- and I should have croqueted the Queen's hedgehog just now, only it ran away when it saw mine coming!' Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
  • In doing so, she was dreadfully burned and her face was permanently scarred.
  • I'm dreadfully sorry to leave after hearing your story, but I am a politically active person, and I will start a petition or - or something!
  • Critical judgments upset them dreadfully - and while they mightn't show it, they'll certainly let you know it.
  • I am dreadfully sorry for this inconvenience.
  • Still, she was going to miss everyone back home dreadfully.
  • Her heels clopped dreadfully on the stone floor, so she whispered a silent word, rolling her eyes, and they made no more noise.
  • Yet the possibility that it may go dreadfully wrong is also present. Times, Sunday Times
  • And you know what it is that makes it so dreadfully sad? Times, Sunday Times
  • She has been dreadfully out of sorts lately, and she has sunk into a kind of despondent state. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 15, No. 85, January, 1875
  • By the bye, "reproachfully," I have come a journey to-day, and am dreadfully tired, and you have never even offered me a chair; must I get one for myself? Molly Bawn
  • Of course, I will miss you dreadfully now that you won't be here anymore.
  • Suddenly I thought that was unusual, because I realised that every time I've gone to the movies the past couple of months, I've missed her dreadfully as I'm going up into the car park.
  • Their fingers were distinctly charred by dreadfully disappointing sales figures, plans for another fundraising and the resignation of the company's colourful chief executive. Times, Sunday Times
  • It shows just how dreadfully sad life can be, but that there is a glimmer of hope. Times, Sunday Times
  • The actor hammed up the part dreadfully.
  • 'See but,' she cried, 'how dreadfully unprepared is Sir Camilla: or, A Picture of Youth
  • ‘I'm dreadfully sorry, little one, but I've forgotten your name,’ he said to her.
  • It went dreadfully wrong then and I am aware the same thing could happen. The Sun
  • I missed SP dreadfully and kept thinking about our last night that we spent together.
  • Then there's Phillips' distinctive way with a metaphor - comparing herself to a lever pulled down, as "a flipped switch," as a way of saying she feels turned on, empowered without using the dreadfully overused term "empowered. News
  • His behaviour was terrible and I am dreadfully sorry that you were exposed to it.
  • ‘I heard,’ Joey replied, sounding dreadfully serious, as if he'd heard that someone had died.
  • I received many visits form the various nobility who told me how dreadfully sorry they were at my father's death.
  • Today I had dinner with Alec on the pavement outside Thai Metro and some good cider in the Fitzroy Tavern and missed him dreadfully the minute we said good night.
  • But one of her children is dreadfully homesick and frequently upset.
  • The unfortunate Native, expressing no opinion, suffered dreadfully; not merely in his moral feelings, which were regularly fusilladed by the Major every hour in the day, and riddled through and through, but in his sensitiveness to bodily knocks and bumps, which was kept continually on the stretch. Dombey and Son
  • He spoke for a dreadfully long time, quoting the Bible and ejaculating hallelujahs hither and thither.
  • During the owners'absence the lawn became dreadfully unkempt.
  • Make the rounds of talk shows, say how dreadfully sorry you are, maybe even sob a little.
  • I'm sure most actors find most of the stuff in those goody bags dreadfully tacky anyway. Times, Sunday Times
  • A bigger problem, though, is that the book is just so dreadfully dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • They have often been close to their families and are dreadfully missed.
  • I began to scream dreadfully, calling upon M. de Rivière, and, aided by fear, the four of us succeeded in extinguishing the blaze, though not without severely burning our hands. Memoirs of Madame Vigée Lebrun
  • I feel dreadfully sorry for him. The Sun
  • ` I don't think they play at all fairly, 'Alice began, in rather a complaining tone,' and they all quarrel so dreadfully one can't hear oneself speak -- and they don't seem to have any rules in particular; at least, if there are, nobody attends to them -- and you've no idea how confusing it is all the things being alive; for instance, there's the arch I've got to go through next walking about at the other end of the ground -- and I should have croqueted the Queen's hedgehog just now, only it ran away when it saw mine coming? ' Alice's Adventures In Wonderland
  • Those who have read or seen War Horse will know that the horses suffered dreadfully during the conflict. Times, Sunday Times
  • I feel dreadfully sorry for Charlie and I know the whole village will be very upset.
  • Dreadfully affected by this account of his mother, all of whose sufferings he felt, however coarse and simple the relation of them, Orlando now again enquired of his informer, if she knew where his mother and sisters lived in town? The Old Manor House
  • I wish I could see our child more than this and I miss him dreadfully sometimes, but I have to work very hard these days to support my family.
  • Sighing dreadfully, he walked out of the wooden door and picked up his axe to begin chopping what he thought was enough fire wood to last for three days.
  • I am dreadfully sorry, but am I interrupting an important meeting?
  • You are so dreadfully disagreeable to-day. Daniel Deronda
  • the dreadfully close atmosphere
  • We love him so very much and miss him dreadfully.
  • I mean, there is something so dreadfully solid about it, and, obviously, disputable.
  • They're dreadfully busy at the moment.
  • Camilla cast up her eyes and hands: 'Lionel,' she cried, 'what have you done with your heart? has it banished every natural feeling? has the affecting letter of the best of fathers, his cruel separation from the most excellent of mothers, and even your own dreadfully censurable conduct, served but to amuse you with ridicule and derision?' Camilla
  • It's all made me dreadfully homesick for Costa Rica, and for all my friends.
  • I thought it was a dreadfully cowardly thing to do. The Sun
  • Tales of playing bridge and how dreadfully common the South of France has become for holidays conclude with the observation that ‘scientists are the new rock and roll stars’.
  • I knew why he was gone, but I was just so lonely and I missed him dreadfully.
  • His considerable strength and skill that would easily outmatch an opponent in normal situations now seemed dreadfully inadequate.
  • I remember being aware that, calm as she was on the surface, she was suffering dreadfully. Times, Sunday Times
  • I feel this point is extremely important for a person like me, who is often afraid of a state of desirelessness, which is dreadfully similar to total void or actually death. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • They have been stuttering along, playing dreadfully away from home and struggling to get the best out of their superstars. The Sun
  • The production of leather from animal hides was a time consuming and dreadfully smelly process.
  • The production of leather from animal hides was a time-consuming and dreadfully smelly process.
  • We are all very proud of Dan and his achievements in his short but very full life. We all miss him dreadfully.
  • They have been stuttering along, playing dreadfully away from home and struggling to get the best out of their superstars. The Sun
  • I feel dreadfully sorry for her and I know Michael will be really upset about it.
  • Your children need you here and will miss you dreadfully if you left now.
  • I had that thing called a premonition that something was dreadfully wrong. CNN Transcript Jan 12, 2005
  • It made me feel dreadfully insignificant. Anne of Green Gables
  • She is now getting a sense of herself back, after ‘a very long goodbye’, but still misses her mother dreadfully.
  • Did he understand that something was dreadfully wrong? Times, Sunday Times
  • She could not bear to think that her beloved son might suffer dreadfully just because she was not able to stop smoking.
  • But before his eyes were closed, Mr. Fox came to inform him that the carpenter had found the water above the kelson, and that the ship had certainly sprung a leak; he immediately rose and took the carpenter down to the hold along with him, when, to his infinite surprise, he heard the water roaring in dreadfully. Thrilling Narratives of Mutiny, Murder and Piracy A weird series of tales of shipwreck and disaster, from the earliest part of the century to the present time, with accounts of providential escapes and heart-rending fatalities.
  • There's no question that what has happened to her is dreadfully sad, but really she's a very extreme case - a tragic casualty.
  • In Pym's pages the ladies were the most virtuous and proper of their sex (though dreadfully persecuted), but he merely told you so at the beginning, and now and again afterwards to fill up, and then allowed them to act with what may be called rashness, so that the story did not really suffer. Tommy and Grizel
  • He said: 'It really is a dreadfully sad story. The Sun
  • This remarkable movie gets dreadfully close to countless numbers of birds as they proceed through their yearly cycle of north and south migration.
  • Coinciding with this woeful happening, a howling wind blew dreadfully.
  • Nope, the key to advancement is to carry the water, no matter how often and how dreadfully you are wrong. But That’s Just Common Sense | ATTACKERMAN
  • But isn't it refreshing to be able to tell you about two clubs with a good news story - even though both are performing somewhere between disappointingly and dreadfully on the field?
  • She missed her young children dreadfully during her 27 month absence from England.
  • Nevertheless, our mum wanted to take care of us and missed us dreadfully.
  • But how he must have suffered, poor fellow: he must have suffered dreadfully. The Catalans
  • It feels like there are spiders inside my mind, skittering and tapping me dreadfully with hundreds of nasty little feet.
  • I don't think they play at all fairly," Alice began, in rather a complaining tone, "and they all quarrel so dreadfully one can't hear one's self speak -- and they don't seem to have any rules in particular: at least, if there are, nobody attends to them -- and you've no idea how confusing it is all the things being alive: for instance, there's the arch I've got to go through next walking about at the other end of the ground -- and I should have croqueted the Queen's hedgehog just now, only it ran away when it saw mine coming! The Junior Classics — Volume 6 Old-Fashioned Tales
  • To observe that something precious has been lost, covered over, and denied is regarded as dreadfully unsophisticated.
  • I was terrified, dreadfully unhappy and hated myself.
  • The version of the play that I saw had been dreadfully bowdlerized.
  • I am really, truly, extremely, dreadfully, horribly sorry!
  • With respect to the word "sterile" as used for male or polleniferous flowers, it has always offended my ears dreadfully; on the same principle that it would to hear a potent stallion, ram or bull called sterile, because they did not bear, as well as beget, young. More Letters of Charles Darwin — Volume 1
  • Assured walls are in fact dreadfully thin and people wake each other up in the night all the time, and have no auditory privacy.
  • there was a dreadfully bloody accident on the road this morning
  • ‘I miss him dreadfully,’ she says, pulling at a piece of wool on her pink cardigan.
  • Both events, one dreadfully sad, one wonderfully happy, illustrate the extremes to which we can be tested in our lives.
  • Aeneas was dreadfully tossed and endangered by a storm; and perhaps for the same reason Herod, that tyrant and cruel King of Judaea, finding himself near the pangs of a horrid kind of death — for he died of a phthiriasis, devoured by vermin and lice; as before him died L. Sylla, Pherecydes the Syrian, the preceptor of Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • Cuts to youth services have suffered dreadfully in recent years. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a dreadfully emotional parting.
  • How dreadfully dull you must have been! Daniel Deronda
  • A couple of video segments are superfluous and dreadfully produced.
  • She had not yet been allowed to visit him in the cells and he missed her dreadfully.
  • He is dreadfully tough.
  • I thought it was a dreadfully cowardly thing to do. The Sun
  • Critical judgments upset them dreadfully - and while they mightn't show it, they'll certainly let you know it.
  • But I also feel dreadfully sad for it because the breeding has brought horrendous problems, both physical and mental. The Sun
  • I knew something was dreadfully wrong. The Sun
  • Maggie was sitting on her bunk bed, waiting for father to bring home Sarah - she missed her dreadfully when she was away and she had been afraid to move, for fear that she might wake her mother.
  • I know a couple of English profs who, after reading this dribble, are dreadfully sorry they gave me an ‘A’.

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