Get Free Checker

vociferously

[ UK /və‍ʊsˈɪfəɹəsli/ ]
[ US /vəˈsɪfɝəsɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a vociferous manner
    he complained vociferously

How To Use vociferously In A Sentence

  • Welfare feminists vociferously supported protective legislation, and equality feminists vehemently opposed it.
  • In fact, they argued so vociferously, over everything from the dates of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah to those of the consuls of ancient Rome, that their quarrels became proverbial.
  • In those last couple of decades Elizabeth Taylor became a heroic coper with ill health, a supporter of good causes, and a vociferously loyal friend to, among others, Michael Jackson. Elizabeth Taylor remembered by Philip French | Feature
  • For a man who has been criticised vociferously over the past few months, he looks supremely unbowed.
  • In fact, lakhs of Kashmiri Hindus known as Kashmiri Pandits were forced to migrate from Kashmir Valley by fundamentalist organizations as even they have been vociferously demanding this status for the last many years. J&K Hindus: Elated in minority
  • I am concerned with the critically low levels of calcium circulating in their blood, an electrolyte that is only slowly being repleted, since it is at the same time being vociferously sucked up by their stunted and crooked bones. Between Expectations
  • That impresario in his palmy days was once faced with a press complaining vociferously that too many of the new American plays he was energetically producing were clinkers.
  • He vociferously opposed the state of emergency imposed by the government.
  • As they marched from the railroad stations, they were escorted by crowds cheering vociferously.
  • The boys hurrahed vociferously when they left what they called wretched little England; but subsequently Richard held that his having been educated abroad was an incalculable loss to him. The Life of Sir Richard Burton
View all