nastily

IPA: nˈæstʌɫi

adverb

  • In a nasty manner.
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Examples of "nastily" in Sentences

  • With a moose carcass, he added, chuckling nastily.
  • "I thought you said he was poor," Hutchins put in nastily.
  • “Oh, Maggie,” Clay said, tilting his head and grinning nastily.
  • Offered apples, we groused nastily about nutritional content and the guides' relative youth.
  • This could end very very nastily for the UK, we might soon be looking with envy upon Japan in the 1990s or Argentina in the 1970s.
  • I think he'd rather bash us up a bit and say, quite nastily, go on unions, go and control all this, do it within the law otherwise we'll get the injunctions out.
  • But the real fear here is that when the real economies in the U.S. and in Europe start slowing, the consensus is they are going to slow pretty nastily, that is going to have a major knock-on affect to Asia.
  • That Israel has embargoed "... building materials, generators, medication, medical equipment and educational materials" bound for besieged Gaza shows the true colors of its government, and those colors can only be characterized as nastily ugly.
  • Contrast Katz' attitude to that of Keller of the New York Times, who instead insists throughout on treating Assange only "as a source," and adds rather nastily, "I do not regard Assange as a partner, and I would hesitate to describe what WikiLeaks does as journalism."

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