[
UK
/mɐlˈɪʃəsli/
]
[ US /məˈɫɪʃɪsɫi/ ]
[ US /məˈɫɪʃɪsɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
with malice; in a malicious manner
she answered maliciously
How To Use maliciously In A Sentence
- The bug created a means for hackers to inject malware into vulnerable Windows boxes providing a user can be induced into viewing a maliciously constructed image.
- He then gave me a maliciously gleeful look and walked over to the wall again.
- Wood tells us that this poem "being not rightly understood, and carped at by many, came out soon after a pamphlet written in prose and poetry, entitled 'A free and offenceless justification of a late published and most maliciously misinterpreted Poem, &c. Introduction
- His enemies maliciously conspired to ruin him.
- Section 20 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 creates the offence of unlawfully and maliciously wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm.
- Hackers tried to trick users into visiting a maliciously-constructed website using a blizzard of spam emails last week.
- His eyes glinted maliciously in the morning light.
- The pure snows of January and the spartan colds of February are over, and now the temperatures are falseheartedly rising and maliciously dropping: the venom of arbitrary ice storms, the exhausted bodies desperately hoping for spring, all the clothes stinking of stove smoke. Excerpt: The Lazarus Project by Aleksandar Hemon
- Mamase's accusations are clearly untrue and they must therefore have been made maliciously and with an intention to defame me.
- I have never seen a player like him for working on an opponent's weakness: mildly, serenely, composedly, unmaliciously destroying him. Times, Sunday Times