How To Use most especially In A Sentence
- He could also be irascible, most especially about unjust or unfair behaviour. Times, Sunday Times
- This climate of hostility affects us all, but most especially impacts those who reside overseas.
- Everyone I meet, whether farmer, miner, railman, professor, cleric, or the long-faced Senator, and most especially the wives of these-everyone wants to know why I would submit to a marital practice so filled with subjugation and sorrow. Excerpt: The 19th Wife by David Ebershoff
- To those who have preceded me in the study of the posthistoric world, and particularly to those collectors-too numerous to name here - who have permitted me to examine artifacts surviving so many centuries of futurity, and most especially to those who have allowed me to visit and photograph the era's few extant buildings, I am truly grateful. The Shadow of the Torturer
- It is, on the contrary, a most zealous defence of Perkinism, and a fierce attack upon its opponents, most especially upon such of the medical profession as treated the subject with neglect or ridicule. Medical Essays, 1842-1882
- I remain painfully aware that gestures of appreciation offered here will mean little to the individuals who merit them most: the women and men of Magude district, and most especially of Facazisse, who tolerated my strange ways, who opened their homes and their hearts to me, and who will not likely ever see or read this product of our combined efforts. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
- But if it be the winter season, the part is to be covered with unscoured wool, which is to be sprinkled from above with tepid wine and oil, but on no account is either bandage or compress to be applied; for this should be known most especially, that whatever compresses, or is heavy, does mischief in such cases. On The Articulations
- But I do love the winter - most especially the sort of hard, arctic winters of the upper reaches of North America.
- The difference was apparent in every part of society, most especially in the equality between men and women.
- Perhaps more subtly considered the "JPII priest" attrition is simply a recent example of the perennial struggle for the celibate priest in his affectivity and relationships, in his heart and most especially in his spousal and paternal love. Pope John Paul II