How To Use Exuberantly In A Sentence

  • My older brother has been exuberantly recounting shared moments with celebrities (with varying degrees of truth) for some time now.
  • And he exuberantly flung his arms wide and his head back as he hurled himself into the mood. The Sun
  • Those who enjoy dinner plate sized dahlias, or even beds of exuberantly increasing sweet woodruff need not apply.
  • And he exuberantly flung his arms wide and his head back as he hurled himself into the mood. The Sun
  • He loved the song and danced it exuberantly, perspiration plastering his bangs across his forehead and sending his glasses sliding down to the tip of his nose.
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  • A final score of 10-8 left the Oxford side celebrating exuberantly upon becoming National Student Champions.
  • We have become accustomed to their astonishingly energetic performances and their exuberantly dramatic interpretations. Times, Sunday Times
  • And he exuberantly flung his arms wide and his head back as he hurled himself into the mood. The Sun
  • You have to feel for them: a couple of beers, then suddenly they're facing down a series of exuberantly delivered one-to-ones with some of the most sinister and surreal comic creations this side of The League Of Gentlemen.
  • The brushwork is exuberantly coloristic, the palette composed of delicately keyed harmonies of rose and coral, cool aquamarines, frothy whites, pale golds, and blues.
  • The chief changes come in Chapters Six and Seven of Trimalchio, and the long, late chapter, as Gatsby and Nick sit by the open French windows in Gatsby's house, the dawn after Myrtle's killing, when Gatsby breaks out "exuberantly": "I'll tell you everything. Fitzgerald's 'Radiant World'
  • The former features the great baritone Alfred Drake at his exuberantly hammy best; the latter boasts an incredibly catchy, tune-filled score by Hollywood stalwarts Jay Livingston and Ray Evans. Mining Broadway's Musical Riches
  • And the production is exuberantly creative: boats are suggested by sails and frames; pliers and a feather duster become a parrot. Times, Sunday Times
  • Uchida gave an almost classical strictness to the sonata's opening movement, before turning the scherzo into a fleet, almost dreamlike vision, colouring the modulations of the Largo quite magically, and romping exuberantly through the rondo finale. Mitsuko Uchida
  • When Ona B. bathes us in red in her installations and exuberantly wallows in bright colour, she self-ironically employs the tricks of the trade of the art market to make herself the object of inspection.
  • This type of behaviour will extend into the exuberantly fertile genteel, resulting in an explosion in demand for pre-teen notes of recognition.
  • We have become accustomed to their astonishingly energetic performances and their exuberantly dramatic interpretations. Times, Sunday Times
  • She had bought an amber necklace from the hotel souvenir shop, for a price that she assured me was a real bargain, and had put it right on over one of the exuberantly colored drip-dry polyester blouses that were the mainstay of her traveling wardrobe. Dreaming in French
  • The term Churrigueresque denotes a style that is visually frenetic and exuberantly detailed.
  • Sullivan excels at punditry, happily riffing off the news or essaying exuberantly off the top of his head.
  • The top drawers are rounded on the front, as they are on others of Stahl's chests, and the backboard is exuberantly shaped to resemble breaking waves, typical of Soap Hollow chests.
  • The cowpuncher was a potential cattle-owner and good citizen, and if he went wild on occasion it was largely because he was so exuberantly young. Roosevelt in the Bad Lands
  • For anyone with eyes to see and a television to be parked in front of by benignly neglectful eighties parents Floella is of course best known for her exuberantly dungareed presenting work on Playschool and Playaway. Film | guardian.co.uk
  • We drink it through a bombilla, the little metal suckable strainer they also use in Argentina to drink maté, an exuberantly undrinkable local tea brewed from some violent green shrub.
  • It's almost a redundant question for a show as exuberantly multisensory as this. Times, Sunday Times
  • This type of behaviour will extend into the exuberantly fertile genteel, resulting in an explosion in demand for pre-teen notes of recognition.
  • Their chests swelled with pride as they saluted the general, did an about-face, and marched away exuberantly.
  • The Lady Boys of Bangkok, or the sound of them and their audience at least, rising exuberantly from the theatre next door to contend with the wisdom of the later panelists: a vaguely fantastical backdrop to musings on fantasy. Brian Ruckley · Alt.Fiction 2008: Getting There, Being There, Getting Back
  • the exuberantly baroque decoration of the church
  • Their Arab legionnaires galloped behind, firing their rifles exuberantly into the sky like extras in a Beau Geste film.
  • Some, called runners, spread exuberantly, and others are classified as clumpers, which slowly expands from the original planting.
  • Their chests swelled with pride as they saluted the general, did an about-face, and marched away exuberantly.
  • Aidan called exuberantly as he jogged half a step ahead of Coglin. Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead
  • They were labelled exuberantly, ‘Butifull Toledo steel works, mad only in San Juan’, and it was not for tourists to enquire how Toledo steel came to be made only in San Juan, or where were the foundries and workshops necessarily implied. Tour de Force
  • She had hugged him exuberantly and invited him to dinner the next day.
  • The students exuberantly shot out questions and he sat there answering them in equal spirit.
  • Picasso's pots, pitchers, and platters are exuberantly modern, not only in their late Surrealist morphological fluidity, but also in their rapport with the Duchampian readymade.
  • They smiled exuberantly while mud clung to their hair in clumps, lined the crevices of their ears, nostrils, the rims of their helmets.
  • They went out of the pavilion hand in hand, and on through the sunshine they strolled, swinging hands gaily, reacting exuberantly from the week of deadening toil. CHAPTER II
  • Rows of polystyrene heads, faceless but exuberantly bewigged, stare eyelessly down from shelves. Times, Sunday Times

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