prodigally
IPA: prˈɑdɪgʌɫi
adverb
- In a prodigal manner; extravagantly or wastefully.
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Examples of "prodigally" in Sentences
- But Gold ( "Carter Beats the Devil") is a prodigally gifted storyteller.
- At still other times, his tactics would be to scatter single chips prodigally and amazingly over the table.
- And Tom King, who for half an hour had conserved his strength, now expended it prodigally in the one great effort he knew he had in him.
- Much of the work will likely be done by the president himself - it seems almost impossible that he will refrain from prodigally granting pardons on his way out the door.
- They early discovered the virtues of hot water judiciously saturated with sugar, and they prodigally swam their flapjacks and soaked their crusts in the rich, white syrup.
- The investment game is prodigally encumbered with inducement for manipulation or corruption, imploring the weak of fortitude, morals and principals to abide to discrepant customs.
- But as I watched this revival, I couldn't help but recall time and again the exquisite staging of William Inge's "Picnic" that David Cromer, the most prodigally gifted American theater director of his generation, mounted two years ago for Chicago's Writers 'Theatre.
- Kakutani on A Life of Picasso: The Triumphant Years by John Richardson: "As John Richardson reminds us in the third installment of his magisterial and definitive biography, Picasso not only worshiped the gods Dionysius, Priapus and Mithra (the god of light and wisdom), but also regarded himself as their confrère — an artist so prodigally talented, so daring and so virtuosic that he could reinvent the universe."
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