fanatically

[ UK /fɐnˈætɪkli/ ]
[ US /fəˈnætɪkəɫi, fəˈnætɪkɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a passionately fanatic manner
    he followed the teachings of his guru fanatically
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How To Use fanatically In A Sentence

  • All the performers were almost fanatically health-conscious.
  • The Passion of the Christ powerfully moving and fanatically obtuse in equal doses.
  • It is the race heritage, the sadness which has made the race sober-minded, clean-lived and fanatically moral, and which, in this latter connection, has culminated among the English in the Reformed Chapter 10
  • The revolutionary intelligentsia became fanatically convinced of its own exclusive moral and intellectual superiority.
  • This ancient stronghold of the Volsci, fanatically loyal to Carbo's cause, stood atop a mountain twenty miles to the southwest, and gladly opened the gates in its impregnable walls to receive Ahenobarbus's ten thousand men. Fortune's Favorites
  • Thalberg's German immigrant mother responded by devoting herself fanatically to his well - being and advancement.
  • When World War II broke out, Pound almost fanatically addressed American troops in broadcasts on Rome Radio, which ended in 1945 with his arrestment by partisans and imprisonment by U.S. Forces in a Disciplinary Center near Pisa. Ezra Pound
  • If you like reading about literature, can ignore the frequent use of the ugly word "problematize", and aren't fanatically wedded to one theoretical approach, the book can be addictive. Archive 2005-07-01
  • Edward Herrmann is Hearst, a big and strangely unlovable teddy bear of a man, spying fanatically on his guests and fellow passengers and especially on his beautiful mistress Marion Davies, played by Kirsten Dunst.
  • She alienated her friends when she became fanatically religious
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