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inordinately

[ UK /ɪnˈɔːdɪnətli/ ]
[ US /ˌɪˈnɔɹdənətɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. extremely
    it will be an extraordinarily painful step to negotiate
    she was inordinately smart

How To Use inordinately In A Sentence

  • Mr. Daley's remarks came after the CEO of the Biotechnology Industry Organization, which is hosting BIO 2010 from May 3 to 6 at McCormick, said the "inordinately" high cost of putting on a convention in Chicago will be an important factor in deciding whether to return someday. ChicagoBusiness.com Breaking News
  • The sensual appetites have their own proper sensible objects to which they naturally incline, and since original sin has broken the bond which held them in complete subjection to the will, they may antecede the will in their actions and tend to their own proper objects inordinately. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • These intimate letters introduce us to a man who's not only inordinately interesting, but also vain, funny, abrasive, sarcastic and courageous.
  • Such a panic was set off in August 2007 by inordinately blowing up the dangers to the world financial system inherent in a mere $400 to $600 billion of securities backed by U.
  • But nervousness will likewise do it; fright, or anxiety of almost any kind, will make a horse stale inordinately.
  • One early exercise that I'm still inordinately proud of was the instruction to ‘write a haiku using only the words you can find on the racing page of the morning paper.’
  • However, Romania pays what it describes as inordinately high prices for Russian gas, which is delivered by two intermediary companies. Jamestown Foundation: All Publications
  • she was inordinately smart
  • He almost single-handedly brokered a peace deal with secessionist rebels in Chechnya last fall, thereby ending an inordinately bloody war.
  • In particular, it placed an inordinately high 'exceptionality' burden on the applicants when requesting artificial insemination facilities. Times, Sunday Times
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