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fearsomely

[ UK /fˈi‍əsʌmli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a fearsome manner
    a sabre slammed fearsomely through the thicket in all directions

How To Use fearsomely In A Sentence

  • Volcanoes erupt under glaciers, causing gigantic floods that make the island a fearsomely dangerous place for human colonization.
  • It is a fearsomely complicated one, and I would never dream of showing it in a non-technical book about science if my intention was to be instructive.
  • Smith's fearsomely focused narratives and majestically brutal accompaniment are alternately highlighted or hamstrung by perverse and frustrating production decisions.
  • ROBERT GILDEA, Oxford University's fearsomely erudite professor of modern history, has chosen a large canvas—and a wonderful title.
  • Liverpool were also without Steven Gerrard and although Jimmy Traore looked raw and unseasoned - he gave away the free kick which Harte delivered to Kewell - he was kept on message by Sammy Hyypia who was fearsomely flawless.
  • For most of his career, the 69-year-old stage and TV actor has specialised in playing older character parts - more often than not the kind of fearsomely whiskered old coves who look like they'd be pretty handy with a blunderbuss.
  • The stroppiest, most talented and fearsomely hedonistic Banana had left to marry the beardy one from the Eurythmics, and the assumption was that she'd hung up her dungarees to become a Rock Wife. Music news, reviews, comment and features | guardian.co.uk
  • At first sight the menu was fearsomely unexciting.
  • Frith piles up layers of sharp, melodic guitars, woozy mellotrons or mournfully folky violins, with results that range from the infectiously melodic to the fearsomely dense.
  • If you are going to make your own sugar syrup, do any hot sugar work or make toffee, just remember that it gets fearsomely hot.
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