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monotonously

[ UK /mənˈɒtənəsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a monotonous manner
    the history of the play throughout the latter part of the eighteenth century is monotonously uneventful

How To Use monotonously In A Sentence

  • Worse, his singing continues to be monotonously loud and colorless, without a trace of grace, style, or musical shape.
  • While the air of it was orientally catchy, it was chanted slowly, almost monotonously, but it was quickly provocative of excitement to the spectators: CHAPTER XVI
  • Outside, the crickets chirped monotonously, with a Webern-like inconsistency yet precision of rhythm.
  • How monotonously alike all the great tyrantsand conquerors have been : how gloriously different are the saints.
  • On the printed page the orations' abstractions, clichés, and monotonously regular iambic tetrameter and rhymes smother both emotional force and intellectual conviction.
  • But, surprisingly for a writer of his resourcefulness, most of the invective is monotonously uninventive. Times, Sunday Times
  • The turfs burned red, the cruisie burned low, the wheel "hummed" monotonously, and Maggie stepped lightly to-and-fro before it. A Daughter of Fife
  • The history of the play throughout the latter part of the eighteenth century is monotonously uneventful.
  • The Metro has lost its awe, and I now feel like a true Muscovite as I monotonously ride the Metro without effort.
  • All the buildings here look monotonously alike.
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