How To Use Laboriously In A Sentence

  • Most of the contentiousness seems laboriously excogitated.
  • A cleaning woman was laboriously washing the marble floor of the foyer.
  • We could not tell for certain what his avenging missile had been, but the last we saw of the scene was the other carabinero laboriously plucking out of his colleague's nape what we hoped and believed were sea-urchin spines. Try Anything Twice
  • Laboriously rolling each case on a lube pad was a chore to be avoided but today we can use any of several excellent aerosol case lubes.
  • The wind was against the Russian fleet, so the ships would have to be towed or kedged, laboriously pulled to windward by advancing their anchors, a few yards at a time. John Paul Jones
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  • We walked on for some minutes in musing silence, and the rude log-hut in which my wise companion had his home came in view, -- the flocks grazing on undulous pastures, the lone drinking at a watercourse fringed by the slender gum-trees, and a few fields, laboriously won from the luxuriant grassland, rippling with the wave of corn. A Strange Story — Complete
  • So the reports flow in on Media Watch's snide little excoriation, laboriously trying to exploit the name and fame of my late father.
  • Slowly and laboriously the aircraft gained airspeed as the needle crept past stalling speed.
  • Unto the first of these, the considerations of the original of the soul, whether it be native or adventive, and how far it is exempted from laws of matter, and of the immortality thereof, and many other points, do appertain: which have been not more laboriously inquired than variously reported; so as the travail therein taken seemeth to have been rather in a maze than in a way. The Advancement of Learning
  • The bits are laboriously overegged, overlong and oversold. Times, Sunday Times
  • Laboriously, he strung them on a thread and hung them round his neck by way of adornment.
  • their lives were spent in committee making decisions for others to execute on the basis of data laboriously gathered for them
  • Even most forms of neorealism don't put much emphasis on plot -- writers having sensibly concluded there's no point in competing with movies for the slam-bang scenario -- and what would be the point of laboriously describing in a synopsis the details of character and setting that the reader simply has to encounter in the finished work? Principles of Literary Criticism
  • The passata came from tomatoes grown in my mother's garden in the South of France, laboriously boiled, peeled and deseeded.
  • Watercolor painters before c. 1800 had to make paints themselves using pigments purchased from an apothecary or specialized "colourman"; the earliest commercial paints were small, resinous blocks that had to be wetted and laboriously "rubbed out" in water. WarCry Network : Latest News
  • The cards were completed laboriously and with a fair amount of guesswork.
  • Someone laboriously tills the land and the fruits are snatched away by the opportunists.
  • Another method is to laboriously analyse the injesta or food consumed and compare it with the dejecta or excretions, until a quantity and kind of food is found which is just sufficient to keep the body in equilibrium. The Chemistry of Food and Nutrition
  • This old trick means that there's no need to laboriously cream together the butter and sugar, which saves time, or even pre-soak the fruit, as Mary Berry and Claire Clark suggest, and, some claim, gives a lighter, and yes, a moister end result. How to cook perfect Christmas cake
  • Later didactic murals on town-hall staircases and library walls tended to be executed on canvas and then stuck up, rather than laboriously painted in situ.
  • The need to understand the effects of phenomena such as multipath reflections, atmospheric effects, and dropouts on devices has therefore meant that products must be taken out into the field and laboriously tested. LBSzone RSS News Feed
  • There are liquid clays, springs, hard rocks, and those soft and deep quagmires which special science calls moutardes. 59 The pick advances laboriously through the calcareous layers alternating with very slender threads of clay, and schistose beds in plates incrusted with oyster-shells, the contemporaries of the pre-Adamite oceans. Les Miserables
  • Farther down was the now completed Colosseum, around which other thousands stood watching the pigmies who, in dark clusters upon the top and along the edge, laboriously erected the poles upon which, in case of need, to stretch the protecting velarium. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 6, No 3, September 1864 Devoted To Literature And National Policy
  • Laboriously, James practiced creating the illusion of perspective in a drawing and experimented with point of view.
  • Beast, 2005, a snouty, projecting recent wall-piece, was among the most sculptural works on view, with the laboriously reconfigured branches completely subsumed by a singular, arresting form.
  • The grand coalition is much more based on a laboriously worked out equilibrium between the CDU, CSU and SPD.
  • Out of an estimated total of nine jumpers I've laboriously knitted for myself in my thirty-two years of life, only one was actually wearable.
  • He traced his signature laboriously.
  • The need to understand the effects of phenomena such as multipath reflections, atmospheric effects, and drop-outs on GPS devices has therefore meant that products must be taken out into the field and laboriously tested. LBSzone RSS News Feed
  • Recall the days when students sat in front of keypunches laboriously preparing their programs and then waiting for hours or even days to receive a listing file containing a list of vague error messages.
  • There are liquid clays, springs, hard rocks, and those soft and deep quagmires which special science calls moutardes. 59 The pick advances laboriously through the calcareous layers alternating with very slender threads of clay, and schistose beds in plates incrusted with oyster-shells, the contemporaries of the pre-Adamite oceans. Les Miserables
  • Their epic journey is regularly intercut, slightly laboriously, with the fulminations of Mr Neville, the colonial official prosecuting this policy, played by Kenneth Branagh.
  • The passata came from tomatoes grown in my mother's garden in the South of France, laboriously boiled, peeled and deseeded.
  • No need to shield your virginal eyes, the nude figures have been laboriously obscured.
  • Dear, brave Cherry-Cheeks sent it home by the hands of a vagrom pedlar, laboriously and exactly writing on the package the inscription she found on the fly leaf: The Yeoman Adventurer
  • Unto the first of these, the considerations of the original of the soul, whether it be native or adventive, and how far it is exempted from laws of matter, and of the immortality thereof, and many other points, do appertain: which have been not more laboriously inquired than variously reported; so as the travail therein taken seemeth to have been rather in a maze than in The Advancement of Learning
  • After scooting laboriously out of the surf an hour earlier, the turtle had lurched slowly up the sand to this spot where she used her dinner-plate sized rear flippers to gouge a hole deep enough to swallow a man's arm.
  • In the peristyle was a large earthenware jar, which had been broken across the middle and the pieces then sewed carefully and laboriously together with wire. Museum of Antiquity A Description of Ancient Life
  • Opening his eyes halfway, Raeyn laboriously pulled up an electronic mail window on his computer and dictated a message to Antony, providing an outlet for his disquietude and tension.
  • Men do not doff their hats in the down-town elevators which brought her up to the big office where she was employed, a great room near the top of one of the high down-town buildings; the windows looked out on the river, now a white mass of down-flowing ice, through which the calling steamers worked their way laboriously towards the harbour, to the Statue of Liberty standing beside what now looked a white gravel path of entry to the city. Impressions of a War Correspondent
  • You had to run out to find foreign newspapers, or have them laboriously telexed from London or Paris.
  • A century ago, mountains were climbed in hobnailed boots with stafflike ice axes, footsteps laboriously cut all the way to the top.
  • At least one of us will step in a pile of dog dirt which will have to be laboriously extracted from the shoe treads with a stick once we get home.
  • Each page of each book is lovingly assembled and then laboriously hand printed on a R. Hoe Washington handpress that dates back to 1838. Did you know? Mexico has one of the world's oldest still-functioning printing presses
  • Barns and buildings were made by laboriously cutting huge trees with bucksaws and taking them to the sawyer with horse and wagon to be sawed into lumber.
  • In 1898, after laboriously isolating various substances by successive chemical reactions and crystallizations of the products, which they then tested for their ability to ionize air, the Curies announced the discovery of polonium, and then of radium salts weighing about 0.1 gram that had been derived from tons of uranium ore. Curie, Marie Sklodowska
  • Many scientists, including people writing doctoral theses, had access to the bones, and they were laboriously studied.
  • Laboriously we pushed the vehicles up the hill and then pushed off and pedaled like mad until we gained enough speed to coast the two blocks to where the street leveled off again.
  • Most of them didn't believe in modern machinery, so they had to laboriously cut their firewood with bucksaws.
  • In another puzzle the clue "Lug Laboriously" led to the Yiddish word schlep. Harvey Gotliffe, Ph.D.: Glenn Back, Gay Avech
  • The ancient, dusty floorboards groaned miserably as Jacob laboriously climbed off his mattress.
  • And the shade of meaning, the limited qualification, that a Frenchman or Englishman can attain with a mere twist of the sentence, the German must either abandon or laboriously overstate with some colossal wormcast of parenthesis .... Anticipations Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon Human life and Thought
  • The text was laboriously written in longhand, typed by our printer on an office typewriter, and produced from paper plates - all 500 copies.
  • One man laboriously cut the pierced decoration with a fretsaw and a variety of steel punches.
  • Mr. Ruskin bade men "go to Nature in all singleness of heart, and walk with her laboriously and trustingly, having no other thought but how best to penetrate her meaning, _rejecting nothing, selecting nothing and scorning nothing_;" and Mr. Hamerton was literally obeying him when he exiled himself for five years in a hut on an island in a bleak Scotch lake to learn faithfully to portray the shores of that single lake. Lippincott's Magazine, December 1878
  • I think the single most important change for developers in the past 25 years has been the improvements in IDEs and debuggers that automate a lot of the programming and debugging tasks that people used to have to do laboriously by hand.
  • The scientist watches as eagles dive into the river, emerging laboriously moments later with silver salmon firmly in their talons.
  • Basic facts of Indian history and life are laboriously spelt out in early chapters while in others the author assumes that readers know the meanings of Hindi words such as sannyasi someone who has renounced worldly things and be acquainted with the workings of Indian 'vote banks'. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • There are liquid clays, springs, hard rocks, and those soft and deep quagmires which special science calls moutardes. 59 The pick advances laboriously through the calcareous layers alternating with very slender threads of clay, and schistose beds in plates incrusted with oyster-shells, the contemporaries of the pre-Adamite oceans. Les Miserables
  • But why should the descendants of Eusthenopteron have troubled to clamber about laboriously on the land?
  • A whole new generation of pneumatics pre-charged with high pressure air metered from a scuba bottle or laboriously pumped up by hand are bringing us back to the designs of the 18th and 19th centuries.
  • Shoving these thoughts aside, he meditated, laboriously clearing his mind.
  • He clambered laboriously from the shallows, the water draining from the bottom of his "stagged" trousers. The Rules of the Game
  • They are mere phantoms or puppets of schoolcraft, laboriously put together by a learning drawn from old folios. Shakspere and Montaigne
  • As we laboriously went through each box, we marked them off in our spreadsheet.
  • Out of an estimated total of nine jumpers I've laboriously knitted for myself in my thirty-two years of life, only one was actually wearable.
  • Unlike preprocessed shite TV which we can just zone out in front of, as every piece of plot is laboriously flagged, signposted and explained. Cheeseburger Gothic » Anyone besides Orin and me watching Stargate Universe?
  • Items with few words can probably be decoded, albeit laboriously, with adequate comprehension by even the majority of poor readers.
  • She gave in full the list of the seventeen girls who had been honored with scholarships, laboriously writing out their full names, with "Miss" attached to each, and the name of the town and the State in its unabbreviated length. When Patty Went to College
  • She was laboriously typing at a speed which could have explained Maggie Hewson's strictures about the firm's dilatoriness. She Closed Her Eyes
  • A beetle began to crawl laboriously up his leg.
  • Although I'm reasonable at mental arithmetic, I mostly think geometrically and then must laboriously check my geometric intuition with algebra.
  • The programmer will need to enter, laboriously, for each word in the system's lexicon, the different senses and the associated encyclopaedic knowledge.
  • The DRC civil war ended with a peace accord in 2002 which was gradually and laboriously supplemented by further agrements and implemented last year. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Mrs. Daniel Pray, who was almost a giantess and bent laboriously over to accommodate her height to her husband's, took off her glasses and laid them on her declivitous lap, the better to fix Country Neighbors
  • The torch picked out a tiny red hermit crab as it climbed laboriously across the top of a sponge.

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