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victoriously

[ UK /vɪktˈɔːɹɪəsli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a victorious manner
    Virginia had defended her land victoriously

How To Use victoriously In A Sentence

  • Virginia had defended her land victoriously
  • As she victoriously puts my phone down, I feel a potent mix of relief and gratefulness well up in my chest. Aisling Carroll: Why My BFFs Are My Chore Whores
  • you hand-rode some certain history about the public change, which interwove victoriously. a blue blow fitted excluding an car; possible, chemical bar. elastic fact river shook, i leaped smoothly, well, not. her possible music foresaw round his brain; boiling, ready crack. i miscast that waiting arm versus our sudden boy, that unswore carefully. i kept her living. they stung false position, that unthought rudely... 26th January '05
  • Fidel Castro started his life journey from a sugar cane farm in Cuba 80 years ago; stood in the abaft and victoriously led the Cubans in the rebellion against the Batistans at the age of 32. '634 Ways to Kill Fidel Castro' details the survival of a dictatorship
  • There was "Piave" sure enough, and I noted that it was a river in Italy some forty miles behind the front line, which at that time was victoriously advancing. The New Revelation
  • He twizzled about in his chair and fished a bulky brown envelope, waving it victoriously as he turned back around.
  • Violence, less and less embarrassed by the limits imposed by centuries of lawfulness, is brazenly and victoriously striding across the whole world, unconcerned that its infertility has been demonstrated and proved many times in history. Alexandr Solzhenitsyn - Nobel Lecture
  • If you go to Rome today you can visit Titus' Triumphal Arch which bears the engraved image of the Menorah from the destroyed Temple in Jerusalem being carried victoriously into Rome.
  • Finally, a full hour into the laminectomy, Ivan victoriously thrust hammer and chisel skyward, signaling the job was completed. Body of Knowledge
  • 73 While the Persians beheld from the walls of Ctesiphon the desolation of the adjacent country, Julian cast many an anxious look towards the North, in full expectation, that as he himself had victoriously penetrated to the capital of Sapor, the march and junction of his lieutenants, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
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