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hotly

[ US /ˈhɑtɫi/ ]
[ UK /hˈɒtli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a heated manner
    the children were arguing hotly
    `To say I am behind the strike is so much nonsense,' declared Mr Harvey heatedly

How To Use hotly In A Sentence

  • After putting its energy into the 2008 acquisition of Northwest Airlines, the Atlanta-based carrier plans to spend more than $2 billion through 2013 to lure travelers with new flat-bed seats, video on demand and upgraded facilities in hotly contested markets such as New York. Delta Refocuses
  • The seat was being hotly contested among the politicians.
  • the children were arguing hotly
  • The issue is still being hotly debated.
  • The group stage, the most hotly contested part of the negotiations, was once again rather thin in terms of surprises. Times, Sunday Times
  • But you," I demanded hotly; "you with your orgies of sound and sense, with your mad cities and madder frolics — bethink you that you win? WHEN GOD LAUGHS
  • But he was built of loyalty and unsuspicion; and though for a mere second a fear assailed him that the old lady was about to charge Reuben with playing his daughter false, he scouted the fancy hotly. Aunt Rachel
  • It has become the most famous and hotly disputed California ballot measure since Proposition 13 cut property taxes in 1978.
  • One hotly debated alternative proposes plowing the road from West Yellowstone to Old Faithful for mass-transit vehicles, and closing it to snowmobiles.
  • However, York ran into a bad period when lock Brad Macdonald was yellow carded and then, a few minutes later, long-serving lock Spanton was sent off in a hotly disputed incident as the referee penalised him for stamping.
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