How To Use Extravagantly In A Sentence

  • Like jazz, rap extravagantly syncopates a flexible rhythm against a fixed metrical beat thereby turning a traditional English folk meter into something distinctively African-American.
  • Meilir Rhys Williams captures Dennis's anguished flightiness and Oedipal instincts: he extravagantly dances Kirsten Clark as his mum round the living room and allows himself to be lovingly cradled in her lap. Over Gardens Out - review
  • The Monroes continued to entertain extravagantly.
  • It was extravagantly decorated and a side table was filled with small treats and dainties.
  • (Survey report 6801 summarizing Adm. 68/195, 156v, and other data in Adm. 68/194 and/196, found in the microfilms of the Virginia Colonial Records Project, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia; A letter of Carter's executors to Dawkins 1738 May 10 refers to "your ship Bailey.") [3] According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a "rodomontade" is "a vainglorious brag or boast; an extravagantly boastful or arrogant saying or speech. Letter from Robert Carter to Edward Athawes, July 31, 1731
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • In real life they looked small, sallow, extravagantly Vaselined, with poofter pompadours and funny shoes.
  • She is, at 53, shorter than you'd expect, broad in the beam and still so extravagantly beautiful she appears unreal.
  • From the outside, the turreted building, with its terracotta roof tiles, looks like any extravagantly large house on an upmarket estate.
  • The team found that in the previous two decades industrial society had gone into overshoot - the term environmental scientists use for a population of living things that is consuming vital resources so extravagantly that the ability of their environment to keep supporting them is at risk. P2P Foundation
  • I like "Sit in on an AA meeting" and "Extravagantly overtip a bartender," but this one is my fave: Boing Boing: March 14, 2004 - March 20, 2004 Archives
  • She sat up statelily, aware that she looked well in her new frock with the fine lace collar she had extravagantly purchased the day before, and her leghorn bonnet with its real ostrich feather, which was becoming in the extreme. Marcia Schuyler
  • In a city withboomingindustry, land is precious and cannot be extravagantly used for traffic.
  • It is probably not surprising that this extravagantly rich and imprudent character made enemies, and they jumped at the chance to bring him down when it arose.
  • Angkor Thom Monks, Cambodia, 1968 "Ghostlike faces surround two saffron-robed Buddhist monks in a window of the extravagantly carved Bayon, central temple of Angkor Thom.
  • From Quixote we derived the word quixotic, meaning extravagantly chivalrous and romantically idealistic. Impossible Dream
  • In his last drama, "Arminius," he extravagantly scatters his panegyrics on its fifteen predecessors; but of the present one he has the most exalted notion: it is the quintessence of Scudery! Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 (of 3)
  • They also seemed weirdly ambisexual: at least one seemed to sport eye makeup and extravagantly long lower lashes; another had a monobrow along with bouncy-looking, well-brushed hair.
  • The apocryphon in all its present forms extravagantly magnifies the The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • A lot of extravagantly upholstered chairs and sofas are ranged around a coffee table. Times, Sunday Times
  • Nightflame, for example, features an extravagantly rundown apartment - an infernal oil refinery visible through three windows - in which a meditative black woman stands wearing a ripped ball gown and a belt of barbed wire around her hips.
  • They also seemed weirdly ambisexual: at least one seemed to sport eye makeup and extravagantly long lower lashes; another had a monobrow along with bouncy-looking, well-brushed hair.
  • In the Commons, she was extravagantly lauded for her honesty, integrity, humanity.
  • His surfaces are extravagantly scumbled and full of ragged pentimenti; the boats look like they are embedded in the water rather than floating on it.
  • Saccharine, screen-printed roses on extravagantly billowing skirts left you wondering who might actually get away with them. Times, Sunday Times
  • The western region surrounding Salamanca has an economy based on cattle raising, and the extravagantly large hat and embroidered jacket worn by that province's charros were passed on to the Mexican cowboys.
  • Like jazz, rap extravagantly syncopates a flexible rhythm against a fixed metrical beat thereby turning a traditional English folk meter into something distinctively African-American.
  • I have to confess now , however, that my judgement erred somewhat, though not extravagantly.
  • His surfaces are extravagantly scumbled and full of ragged pentimenti; the boats look like they are embedded in the water rather than floating on it.
  • Headdresses were extravagantly plumed helmets or crowns fusing baroque and classical styles.
  • Casting Herr Drosselmeyer as a travelling adventurer who fascinates little Clara with his tales of the world, Nixon allows the ballet to travel to all the places in Drosselmeyer's mental scrapbook from an extravagantly blizzardy snow scene to an oriental Kingdom of Sweets, populated with a stylish international court. This week's new dance
  • Ghostlike faces surround two saffron-robed Buddhist monks in a window of the extravagantly carved Bayon, central temple of Angkor Thom.
  • Headdresses were extravagantly plumed helmets or crowns fusing baroque and classical styles, and the masquers were shod in tightly fitting short boots, or buskins.
  • She exclaimed over Zoe, admiring her extravagantly, insisted upon kissing away a purely imaginary look of headache from her brother's brow, and led the way quite tinily regal, her running line of comment unbroken. Star-Dust
  • You may baulk at forking out your hard-earned cash for these extravagantly self-obsessed, petulant, little scamps.
  • Other pictures followed, other palaces were built ( 'la fureur de bâtir chez nous est plus forte que lamais,' wrote Catherine the Great), and in 1764 the Empress installed the prizes of her collection in the sober Hermitage which she had specially made to adjoin the extravagantly baroque Winter Palace ordered by her predecessor Elizabeth. In Russia's Museums
  • They clustered at the doorway as an extravagantly dressed woman wearing slippers stepped down from the cab. Times, Sunday Times
  • Under certain conditions the spores grow extravagantly, infiltrating the tree with multitudes of thread-thin tentacles.
  • The antinomic procedure was extravagantly devel - oped by Fichte and Hegel, Hegel complaining that ANTINOMY OF PURE REASON
  • In the 1840's the term Gent was most particularly applied to the young middle-class idler who aped his superiors and dressed extravagantly; the Mooner was rather older and spent his time "mooning" at shop windows and ambling gently about the town. Royal Flash
  • Reading his extravagantly received 1994 book, "The Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century, 1914-1991," the celebrated Kremlinologist Robert Conquest concluded that Mr. Hobsbawm suffers from a "massive reality denial" regarding the Soviet Union. How a True Believer Keeps the Faith
  • He paused often to consider what he was being told, teased the young woman who was interpreting in sign language for the deaf children, and smiled extravagantly throughout.
  • Gene Vincent's was greasy, James Brown's extravagantly pompadoured, Elvis's as carefully coiffed as the 18th green at Augusta.
  • Headdresses were extravagantly plumed helmets or crowns fusing baroque and classical styles, and the masquers were shod in tightly fitting short boots, or buskins.
  • A lot of extravagantly upholstered chairs and sofas are ranged around a coffee table. Times, Sunday Times
  • Women with 'crimped' hair indulge in extravagantly elaborate 'affairs'. The complicated story of Rielle Hunter and Jonathan Darman, the Newsweek reporter.
  • Extravagantly costumed masquerade troupes shimmied down the streets as trucks with speakers piled high blasted out calypso and soul.
  • By supercar standards, though, it is not extravagantly priced for a beautifully engineered machine.
  • Granada, in the heart of their great conquest; and it is a most beautiful church, of a mingled Saracenic plateresque Gothic, as the guide-books remind me, and extravagantly baroque as I myself found it. Familiar Spanish Travels
  • Often extravagantly expensive, they are about the size of a hockey puck and just as dense.
  • They combined apricots, raisins and almonds in meat dishes, which were extravagantly embellished with cream and thin sheets or beaten gold and silver foil.
  • He crossbred visual panache and hedonistic flair, notably in "Sign of the Cross" (1932), with a lesbian dance sequence, a lithe Claudette Colbert bathing in milk, and Charles Laughton playing an extravagantly gay Nero. Review of "Empire of Dreams," Scott Eyman's biography of Cecil B. DeMille
  • I doubt I have ever read a novel with so many extravagantly nonsensical similes and rococo metaphors.
  • Many parish churches were extravagantly rebuilt, and lavished with vessels and ornaments which foreign visitors thought worthy of a cathedral.
  • But NAF self-consciously did use the word "commons", indeed so extravagantly that it was repeated more than 200 times in this brief 21 page document, twice as many times, interestingly, as they used the word "military". The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Set to Rossini's titular score, it chivvies and inspires its dancers to delicious extremes of virtuosity, extravagantly sustained poses, scintillating footwork and wicked speeds. This week's new dance
  • He crossbred visual panache and hedonistic flair, notably in "Sign of the Cross" (1932), with a lesbian dance sequence, a lithe Claudette Colbert bathing in milk and Charles Laughton playing an extravagantly gay Nero. Review of "Empire of Dreams," Scott Eyman's biography of Cecil B. DeMille
  • It exasperates the less extravagantly gifted but I have never thought that it reveals a submissiveness of mind. VVS Laxman is the latest standard bearer for the Golden Age
  • And he wore his kingliness well, as Nick observed how extravagantly he was treated by the waitstaff and how generously—but quietly—he responded. A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set
  • Epiphany" is pretty extravagantly lovely for a hymn; check out those strong-beat double non-harmonic tones in the third bar, like cheese melting onto the sirloin burger of subdominant substitutions. Star Search
  • Bathing suits are something else as well - the extravagantly colored two-pieces are joined by straps running up both sides.
  • It was filling, the whole thing extravagantly scented with chunks of cinnamon bark and wood-scented, tarry black cardamom.
  • Cavorting among the alphabet characters are tiny human figures, veritable Tom Thumbs, populating a world of extravagantly scaled objects.
  • Public rooms are comfortably understated and open onto well-kept gardens, while its 20 bedrooms, some of them squeezed into extravagantly timbered loft spaces, are all cosily warm and well-equipped.
  • They do not stock the trendier mocktails that come extravagantly priced in the new chai bars the city is suddenly full of.
  • Extravagantly showy and ostentatious work is pretentious when the merit it demands is unjustified.
  • The only iffy note was the extravagantly furry fingerless gloves, but they'd be brilliant for demisting your windscreen mid-drive. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even the best (read extravagantly expensive) binocular on the market will give you a fuzzy view of the world until you correctly set the diopter ring. Focus Your Binoculars by Adjusting the Diopter
  • From the outside, the turreted building, with its terracotta roof tiles, looks like any extravagantly large house on an upmarket estate.
  • From the outside, the turreted building, with its terracotta roof tiles, looks like any extravagantly large house on an upmarket estate.
  • They clustered at the doorway as an extravagantly dressed woman wearing slippers stepped down from the cab. Times, Sunday Times
  • South could have survived by ruffing with dummy's spade six and running the spade jack, but he extravagantly ruffed with dummy's jack, then played a spade to his queen.
  • Moments later an ancient Rolls-Royce pulls up front and a bride dressed in a extravagantly decorated Shinto wedding dress climbs out and steps slowly through the lobby, carefully balanced on her wooden zori. Made Better in Japan
  • A Philadelphia customer admired the company's cut glass but hesitated to buy any because it was ‘most extravagantly dear.’

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy