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insinuatingly

ADVERB
  1. in an insinuating manner
    the art book has art to sell, insinuatingly, and for a purpose, like the American muse, which has in fact a tradition to sell, and one which doesn't exist, in painting

How To Use insinuatingly In A Sentence

  • ''I feel her everywhere,'' Mrs. Danvers insinuatingly tells the second Mrs. de Winter, the unnamed narrator. Psychos, Obsessives And Other Loons
  • Even as he is making fun of him, Monty drapes his arm insinuatingly around Leroy's shoulders. Caught in the Crossfire: Adrian Scott and the Politics of Americanism in 1940s Hollywood
  • One typical Fox story highlighted by Stewart commented insinuatingly that Barack Obama is ahead right now in many of the battleground states — the same states where investigations are under way for voter fraud. Jon Stewart: Fox Ignoring ‘Clusterf#@k to the Poor House’ | Disinformation
  • In this episode, he and his magic unicorn Trixie and his father are visiting American Girl Place and he insinuatingly asks the clerk, "Do you have any American Girl ... accessories? And how!
  • Grinning insinuatingly at me, one of them picked up a small stone and heaved it out across the steely surface. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • With your fascinations and "-- insinuatingly --" a word in season from me, I see no reason why you should not claim as your own the man whom you -- well, let us say, like; while I-- The Haunted Chamber A Novel
  • And Uncle Abner cackled insinuatingly at the editor's remark, for he was expecting at least a "stickful" in the "Personal Notes" of the Sixes and Sevens
  • You are a crack shot issuing DMCA takedown orders, I believe?" said the pirate, insinuatingly. Shakespeare Help Needed
  • When Finlay asks if he had ever met Samuels before, Monty says no, then adds insinuatingly, Of course, I've seen a lot of guys like him. Caught in the Crossfire: Adrian Scott and the Politics of Americanism in 1940s Hollywood
  • the art book has art to sell, insinuatingly, and for a purpose, like the American muse, which has in fact a tradition to sell, and one which doesn't exist, in painting
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