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fearlessly

[ UK /fˈi‍ələsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. without fear
    fearlessly, he led the troops into combat

How To Use fearlessly In A Sentence

  • Hunt was also to write that he and Millais used to stand in front of the Raphael cartoons (then at Hampton Court) and judge them fearlessly, also that they condemned Raphael's Transfiguration (which they had never seen) 'for its grandiose disregard of the simplicity of truth, the pompous posturing of the Apostles, and the unspiritual attitudinising of the Saviour.' Cosa Nostra
  • They unconsciously finish each other's sentences, and fearlessly embark on dizzying flights of fancy, more than confident they can talk each other down.
  • Having "exorcised" at least some of your fears, and made plans for addressing the remainder, it's time to practice writing fearlessly. Hillary Rettig: How to Overcome Writer's Block
  • The 25-year-old player tackled fearlessly in defence and was, therefore, awarded his first man-of-the-match award.
  • There is a positive stereotype secretly held by librarians, one that casts us as fearlessly impartial, lightly well-read, knowingly computerate and less socially inept than socially committed.
  • Fairbanks predates Jackie Chan in his insistence on performing dangerous stunts himself, seen here as he fearlessly bounds up and down the ship's rigging.
  • It is hard to avoid stormy waves when you are sailing in rivers;and it is hard to avoid brambles when you are climbing rugged mountains.We hope you can fearlessly fight the stormy waves and hack your way through the jungle.
  • The "plunderers," if such they may be called, were not the fiery South Carolinians who, under Kershaw, had so fearlessly and fiercely stormed and carried the Union breastworks at dawn. Reminiscences of the Civil War
  • But would there ever again be a call for braggers (wool merchants) or bottomers (whose job down the mines was to lug the ore from the face to the bottom of the shaft for removal), and how about belly-builders (who made the insides of pianos), bummarees (middlemen in the fish trade), and wanters, who like Crocodile Dundee went fearlessly out catching moles?
  • Of all the Mahomedans assembled in the room discussing the events of the day, one only, an old moollah, openly and fearlessly condemned the acts of his brethren, declaring that the treachery was abominable, and a disgrace to Islam. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 328, February, 1843
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