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uncommonly

[ US /ˌənˈkɑmənɫi/ ]
[ UK /ʌnkˈɒmənli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. exceptionally
    a common remedy is uncommonly difficult to find

How To Use uncommonly In A Sentence

  • I thought John was being uncommonly stupid, and wrote his down as a fool.
  • There were some uncommonly good scones served at tea in the press box yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • But he is not only a fine actor and an even finer dancer he is also uncommonly and unabashedly sexy.
  • It sounds uncommonly like a means of mass-producing aesthetic intensities of the sort hymned at the close of Pater's Renaissance.
  • While obvious fingers point to less PEDs and better pitching, a couple of guys wanted to talk about the uncommonly bad weather we've had this year.
  • Cheshire the ailment known as aphtha or thrush, which affects the mouth or throat of infants, is not uncommonly treated in much the same manner. The Golden Bough
  • As usual, the Judies had the advantage in numbers, and, filled to the brim with righteous indignation, they were proceeding to make things uncommonly warm for the invaders -- Painter had lost his cap, and Tomlin three waistcoat buttons -- when the eye of Jackson, roving up and down the street, was caught by a Seymour's cap. The White Feather
  • It is an uncommonly fine piece of official portraiture, pleasing in its lack of eloquence.
  • Still, we have all slept uncommonly well, thanks to a combination of physical tiredness and gentle rocking throughout the night. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, with the teacher training industry uncommonly influential, the vast menu of educationese has oozed into the classrooms.
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