[
US
/suˈpɹiməɫi/
]
[ UK /suːpɹˈiːmli/ ]
[ UK /suːpɹˈiːmli/ ]
ADVERB
-
to the maximum degree
she remained sublimely oblivious to the possible havoc she might have caused
he was supremely confident
He seemed irritated at Edouard's questions but, apart from that, sublimely unconcerned
How To Use supremely In A Sentence
- The scene near the Chennai Kaliappa Hospital, on Tuesday was supremely ironical, and drew sharp reactions from tree lovers who were passing by.
- What people most long for in ogling the screen is to witness some torrid lascivious scene: the incentives to gaze are supremely lubricious.
- The result: a spare, jagged, supremely efficient novel (183 pages) that, although utterly lacking in exposition, lays bare an entire world of workaday lowlifes trying to get by on the fringes of organized crime. New Fiction
- Yesterday we got not a nudge but a forceful shove from a man who is supremely confident in his bully pulpit. Times, Sunday Times
- In the Finale - to my mind, the most miraculous symphonic movement ever written - Jochum and his Bavarians are supremely moving.
- Communion in the hand kept to a minimum, 2 Deacons alongside the Celebrant, no concelebration, birettas, supremely reverent atmosphere, and beautiful vestments and even more beautiful music exclusively polyphonic/chant. "Liturgical paradigms for the whole world..."
- Although Neville was supremely competent both as a newspaper journalist and as a broadcaster, I always thought of him pre-eminently as a man of the arts.
- He's supremely confident, though, of South Korea's ability to discourage any designs the North might have of risking another shooting war.
- Gillian Anderson is supremely self-contained, demonstrating a subtlety in her performance that mirrors the style of the film.
- I had met women of all shapes and sizes; blondes, brunettes and redheads, some bubbly, some serious, some supremely confident, others slightly hesitant.