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"atrociously" Definitions
  1. very badly synonym terribly
  2. in a way that is very cruel and that shocks you

72 Sentences With "atrociously"

How to use atrociously in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "atrociously" and check conjugation/comparative form for "atrociously". Mastering all the usages of "atrociously" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Congo is atrociously governed; getting anything done there is tricky.
We have witnessed this so atrociously in the brutality of Aleppo.
The record of the church on this question is atrociously bad.
Detroit has atrociously high levels, as does Flint, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Baltimore.
Military.com: You use pseudonyms to discuss multiple aviators who acted atrociously towards you.
The band's first single, "Dallas," came out on ABC in 211, but performed atrociously.
If you've ever been on the atrociously popular website Mumsnet, we'll assume two things.
Although atrociously unprofessional, this seems to be par for the course in today's media.
It had an atrociously outdated processor and was available in both Windows and Android variants.
Mr Tshisekedi named a new management team for Gécamines, the atrociously run state mining giant.
Recall, if you can, the atrociously-photographed strawberry-topped pizza that nauseated much of Twitter mere weeks ago.
The Spurs had shot atrociously to start Game 2 on Monday night, plunging themselves into an early hole.
It is the peddling of smut and it is atrociously unfair to Mr. Wynn, his family and friends.
Each has a flimsy justification (they're blocking the road; they stole money from me) and are often atrociously acted.
Even if you can somehow look past the content, Gay World is atrociously made, nearly unplayable, and barely runs.
They are atrociously uninteresting and, as such, are almost certain to notch up another stolid season in the mid-table.
Because if you really care for someone, but their values are atrociously different to yours, then it will just cause problems.
The snowsuit becomes smeared in what looks like blood, as if it has barely survived some frosty and atrociously extended ordeal.
Of course, I have also viewed porn that is atrociously dishonest, meaning that the performances are forced or, at times, cruel.
They are anti-illustrative, not least because many of them are low-quality snaps, dingy, hard to decipher, and often atrociously reproduced.
There's a brief winter battle scene, atrociously cut into a narrative that takes place largely when trees are in bloom, but that's it.
Places like Bangladesh and Senegal still need help, and are not so atrociously mismanaged that the aid is bound to be stolen or wasted.
"They've handled the email issue poorly, maybe atrociously, certainly horribly," Clinton administration Commerce Secretary Ed Rendell told the New York Times late last month.
And doctors are widely seen as a trustworthy source — a rarity in a political environment plagued by #FakeNews and atrociously low approval ratings for elected officials.
Black soldiers fought alongside white people during WWII, helping to save the world from Adolph Hitler, only to be treated atrociously when they returned to American soil.
It might produce an atrociously low return on spending, it might achieve nothing for a significant share of recipients, but there are also cases where it helps.
The contemporary press treated George and Willie atrociously, legitimizing their captivity by regurgitating all the "ballyhoo" (wild, improvised performer biographies) that the high carnies could cook up.
Yes, Trump has behaved atrociously both before launching his campaign and in many episodes along the way, and the Clinton camp was focused solely on that narrative.
The atrociously named I.D. Vizzion has 665 kilometers (413 miles) of range and an incredibly sparse interior — think Tesla Model 3 but without a steering wheel or pedals.
Across the state, there are dozens of Hasidic yeshivas, with tens of thousands of students — nearly 60,000 in New York City alone — whose education is being atrociously neglected.
"It's atrociously low," said Barbara McQuade, a former United States attorney who teaches law at the University of Michigan and watched much of Mr. Manafort's trial over the summer.
The study comes at a good time, given that we are now in a period which many argue will be better for active investors, who've been underperforming, at times atrociously.
These sensors — which emit short pulses of laser light so that software in a vehicle can create a 3D image of its surroundings — can also be atrociously expensive, ranging from $0003,000 to $8,000.
In related drone news today, the FAA announced that its atrociously named B4UFLY app — that's "before you fly," but styled as if it were a Prince song — is now available in beta for Android.
Still using atrociously slow dial-up at the time—though to be fair, upgrading from 14.4k to 28.8k was a big deal—I'd quietly hope my parents wouldn't pick up the phone, cutting my AOL connection.
On Thursday, Entertainment Weekly premiered an interview between Peele and Aster that is set to appear in the next issue of Fangoria, and Peele just can't stop gushing about how "unique" and "atrociously disturbing" Midsommar is.
The game I best remember, from poring over the pages of Amiga Power back in the 1990s, was 1994's side-on platformer meets atrociously slow motorcycle obstacle course challenge for the rightly maligned Amiga CD32 console.
These products run the gamut from home-brewed concoctions of almost any plant—from mint to (ouch) citrus—to atrociously branded gels and sticks like "18 Again" and "China Shrink Cream," which mix anything from herbs to soaps to mystery chemicals.
The acts of cleaning and home improvement are disgustingly, atrociously boring, but the act of turning your living space into a glittery wonderland or a nightmare den is a treat reserved for adulthood, which usually comes with some spending power and rooms of your own.
Its 1998 release, A Bug's Life, was warmly received, but nowhere near the level of Toy Story's universal acclaim; some critics compared it unfavorably to the competing computer-animated release Antz, which came out a couple of months earlier from Dreamworks and has aged atrociously.
Last year's smashing "Canova's George Washington" cast an 18th-century Italian eye on American presidential demeanors — and "Tiepolo in Milan," in the same restrained way, acts as a somber prequel to this decade's accelerated destruction of cultural heritage, most atrociously in Syria and Iraq.
Swift's Album of the Year acceptance speech was clearly aimed at Kanye West, who name-checked her in a pretty gross way on "Famous," one of the many tracks on his just-released The Life Of Pablo that combine the sonically sublime with the atrociously masculine.
Late work from Davis, Holiday lifts Pelicans past Suns NEW ORLEANS — During their recent 0-3 road trip, the New Orleans Pelicans played so atrociously on offense in the fourth quarter that coach Alvin Gentry would have been well-advised to check the status of his long-term annuities.
Gaetz said that the House would have passed nearly any health-care bill the Senate was able to muster in the ObamaCare repeal debate, and was prepared to vote on the "atrociously bad" Senate version of the budget this week because it was all the Senate could muster.
In a game that looked bleak at the outset, with the Cavaliers playing without the injured Kevin Love, James powered an offense that started the game atrociously and then did just enough to break the upstart hearts of the young Boston Celtics, 87-79, in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals.
Many commentators attacked The Town for its vulgarity. Edmund Yates characterized it as "atrociously blackguard". Its articles covered subjects that most other publications refused to discuss. Some claimed that the paper was known for "invading private life and holding up respectable men to ridicule".
At the village of Binasco, the French atrociously massacred the adult male population.Chandler, Campaigns, p 86 Beaulieu pulled his army back behind the Mincio, with strong patrols west of the river. He urgently tried to put the fortress of Mantua into a state where it could sustain a siege.
Aishwarya, as usual, is a visual treat. The film is just another ramp for her to display her exquisite designer clothes. If only she paid more attention to her acting. Govinda is atrociously overweight, and has a tendency to mouth his dialogues as if everyone in the theatre had lost their hearing.
He introduces Shubhra as his wife to which everyone reacts atrociously. Sulekha is heartbroken and fumes at Adinath and Shubhra. Initially, the family members reject his decision but later accept Shubhra. Adinath's grandfather- Dinanath Shastri (Anand Abhyankar) says that Shubra has a striking resemblance to his sister-in-law Parvati Vahini who mysteriously disappeared about six decades ago.
She cursed Daksha for acting so atrociously toward her and Shiva, and reminded him that his haughty behavior had blinded his intellect. She cursed him and warned that the wrath of Shiva would destroy him and his empire. Unable to bear further humiliation, Sati committed suicide by jumping into the sacrificial fire. The onlookers tried to save her but it was too late.
Ten years later, Nellie moved into a shabby flat in a little town on the west coast, and bumps into the Henshawes. Myra is now bedridden and Oswald works full-time; their upstairs neighbours are atrociously noisy, regardless of Myra's illness. Nellie takes to visiting her at tea-time; she also takes her out by the sea. Myra expresses her regrets over her husband.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 13% based on 38 reviews, with an average rating of 3.5/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Skinwalkers is an atrociously-acted project whose unoriginal and ineptly-staged action sequences remind viewers of far better werewolf and action movies." Skinwalkers had no advance screenings for critics, though Lionsgate did provide DVD screeners to those who asked. Maitland McDonagh of TVGuide.
Marty Malt (Judd Nelson) is an unhappy garbage man who moonlights as an atrociously unfunny standup comic. He lives in a dark, grimy, garbage-strewn urban netherworld, where a company named Blump's apparently owns everything. His best friend and fellow trash collector, Gus (Bill Paxton), is the only one who laughs at his jokes, and his sincerity is questionable. The obnoxiously exuberant Gus plays an accordion, which he always carries with him.
Woods writes that Russell's sea novels "stimulated public interest in the conditions under which sailors lived, and thereby paved the way for the reform of many abuses." The year after Russell's death, Woods wrote: Later, Russell turned his attention to the deplorable provisions that unscrupulous ship-owners provided for merchant seamen on their vessels: "Nothing more atrociously nasty could be found amongst the neglected putrid sweepings of a butcher's back premises".Russell, p. 34 But, his efforts did not stop there.
She was cursed by the Greek goddess Athena, who turned her into the venomous monster she was. Perseus, son of Greek god Zeus and princess Danae, decapitated Medusa using a shield given by Athena. In his painting, Caravaggio depicts a self-portrait of his own face in the place of Medusa's, as a way of indicating his immunity to her dreadful gaze. Though the head is decapitated, it still appears conscious as the painting captures its final moments in silence before being atrociously defeated.
In July 1940, the American Life magazine featured an article on Portugal, and, referring to its recent chaotic history, asserted that "anyone who saw Portugal 15 years ago might well have said it deserved to die. It was atrociously governed, bankrupt, squalid, ridden with disease and poverty. It was such a mess that the League of Nations coined a word to describe the absolute low in national welfare: "Portuguesé". Then the Army overthrew the Republic which had brought the country to this sorry pass".
Vom Warschauer Aufstand bis zum Kessel von Halbe. Band II. 1. Auflage. Verlag Rolf Michaelis, 2003, and the S.S. Sturmbrigade R.O.N.A. Russkaya Osvoboditelnaya Narodnaya Armiya (Russian National Liberation Army), which was made up of anti-Soviet Russian, Belorussian and Ukrainian collaborators, were both sent to Warsaw to put down the uprising. During the battle, the Dirlewanger behaved atrociously, raping, looting, and killing citizens of Warsaw regardless of whether they belonged to the Polish resistance or not; the unit commander SS-Oberführer Oskar Dirlewanger encouraged their excesses.
The replay match was played in a fierce wind, and Old Meburnians were soundly defeated by State Savings Bank, 18.19 (127) to 9.17 (71). Old Melburnians (who defeated State Savings Bank in the semi-finals) played against University B (who had defeated Old Scotch in the semi-finals) in the 1929 A Section Grand Final. Although, perhaps, the far better team on the day, due to its atrociously inaccurate kicking, with 31 scoring shots to 19, Old Melburnians lost the match by 8 points: 5.26 (56) to 9.10 (64).
The manuscript of the Journal, "a handsome lockd volume" as Scott called it, is of quarto size and bound in vellum. The handwriting displayed in it, especially after his final series of strokes, is so atrociously difficult that, according to the Journal's most recent editor, a perfectly accurate transcription is quite impossible. The title-page bears this inscription:Anderson (1998) p. 1 The manuscript was kept at Abbotsford after Scott's death, but was bought by the financier J. P. Morgan around 1900, and is now in the Morgan Library in New York.
BBC's South Asia Correspondent Justin Rowlatt in his article praised the move for its secrecy. Tim Worstall termed the demonetisation as welcome macroeconomic effect in his article in Forbes magazine. Swedish Minister of Enterprise Mikael Damberg supported the move by calling it a bold decision. The demonetisation also came in for sharp criticism from media outside India, with The New York Times saying that the demonetisation was "atrociously planned" and that it did not appear to have combatted black money, while an article in The Guardian stated that "Modi has brought havoc to India".
The new paper, The Representative, promoted the mines and those politicians who supported them, particularly Canning. Disraeli impressed Murray with his energy and commitment to the project, but he failed in his key task of persuading the eminent writer John Gibson Lockhart to edit the paper. After that, Disraeli's influence on Murray waned, and to his resentment he was sidelined in the affairs of The Representative.Bradford, pp. 16–21 The paper survived only six months, partly because the mining bubble burst in late 1825, and partly because, according to Blake, the paper was "atrociously edited", and would have failed regardless.
Expansion came to the Northwest in 2006, but no-one could have predicted the astonishing turnaround in form Cascade suffered this year. Having been almost invincible in 2005, they managed just 3 wins all season - 1-0 over new boys Tacoma F.C., 2–0 over BYU Cougars, and 2–1 over Tacoma again. Cascade's defense was atrociously leaky, conceding 4 goals or more on seven different occasions, while up front only midfielder Kenneth Davis was providing any attacking potency - although it is perhaps indicative that, as the team's top scorer, he only registered three goals all season.
Part IV, p. 15. Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin declared: "A devastatingly silly rehash of the Jaws formula, atrociously scripted, stiltedly acted, and reaching its low point in a grotesquely maudlin finale where the hero pours his heart out in a pep talk to the whales he has trained to graduate standards of communication". Marjorie Bilbow of Screen International wrote, "The special effects are good and there is a fair amount of suspense before each victim is tentacled. But involvement with the characters is minimal ... the excitement lies only in anticipating when the next plastic victim will get nabbed".
His attachment to this concept began with his research among what he called the dispossessed and atrociously exploited Tumbuka people. Vail saw underdevelopment as a step-by-step process of impoverishment and stagnation that started in the middle of the 19th century but accelerated under colonial rule. His theme, developed in four significant papers published between 1975 and 1981, was that the in Indian Ocean ivory and slave trades created a demand for imported goods among the people to the west of Lake Malawi in the late 18th and early 19th century and prompted social differentiation within their traditional societies.
In an article for the Birmingham Mail, writer and television personality Samantha Brick, a native of Birmingham, said that the series was an "atrociously unbalanced" view of the city. Shadow Welfare Minister Chris Bryant claimed that the residents of The Bishop's Avenue in Hampsteadknown as Billionaire's Row because of its expensive propertieswere as likely to have drink and drugs problems as the residents of James Turner Street. Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator, suggested the programme had highlighted a section of society who have been forgotten by the politicians: "These people are people who otherwise don’t have a voice. They don’t vote, so for many years they have just not mattered".
The sound of firing squads, which one still hears in the mournful city, atrociously prolongs the nightmare ... Paris is sick of executions. It seems to Paris that they're shooting everyone. Paris is not complaining about the shooting of the members of the Commune, but of innocent people. It believes that, among the pile, there are innocent people, and that it's time that each execution is preceded by at least an attempt at a serious inquiry ... When the echoes of the last shots have ceased, it will take a great deal of gentleness to heal the million people suffering nightmares, those who have emerged, shivering from the fire and massacre.
At the beginning of this last lecture Feynman said, "I have completely run out of organized ideas", and Ferris felt that this showed in the somewhat "ragged" speech that followed. Eli Kintish in The Yale Review of Books complained that while the lectures "burn with the fuel of Feynman's enthusiasm", they are difficult to follow in places because of their lack of focus. Kintish said that with some editing it would have been "a more accessible read", but added that the book was still full of "original gems". David Goodstein, a physicist who attended the lectures in 1963, wrote in American Scientist that while the book has "some nuggets of pure Feynman gold", it is "badly dated and atrociously edited".
The turbine exhaust was much hotter than that from a piston engine, with pioneering-design gas turbine engines possessing atrociously bad fuel economy figures when compared to traditional reciprocating piston-engine designs. On the upside, the use of inexpensive and widely available kerosene as fuel offset this disadvantage at least to some degree, so the overall economics of running the engines might end up being similar. Another problem was that the gas turbine engine only works well near a particular designed operating speed, although at (or near) that speed it can provide a wide variety of output torque. More specifically, turbines offer very little torque at low speeds, which is much less of a problem for a piston engine, and not at all for an electric motor.
He was a devoted violinist, often practicing for hours at a time, yet his style of playing was unique. As remembered by his nephew Vaux: “Having very short fingers, he decided that he would develop a whole new system of music for the violin, and therefore cut down the necks of all his instruments, thereby shortening them materially so his fingers could reach the strings more easily…The music which he then subsequently played consisted of very high squeaks and he would practice for hours in his room on these principles which he developed.” As his son-in-law Alexander Calder, too, recalled in his Autobiography with Pictures, “Mr. James used to the play violin atrociously but assiduously.”Calder, Calder: An Autobiography with Pictures (New York: Pantheon Books, 1966), p. 150.
It reflects foreign softwood timbers coming in from Scandinavia (Norwegian Fir) and is largely weatherboard clad. The move to brick which became a village feature from the 18th century is represented in The King's Head (c.1770s with additions) but this, like the Post Office of c.1810 has been stucco faced. The upper windows of this important building above a pleasant shopfront bow, have been atrociously replaced in the late 20th century. The Old Bakery on the Green is therefore the best example to seek – a compact yellow stockbrick home of small scale and with appropriate windows, built in the 1830s. A little outside the village, at Gunhill Farm and the Mill House Farm, are two characteristic early Victorian villa-type residences, erected for prosperous farming and milling families, the first in 1839 and the latter in 1850.
Roger Penske withdrew his entry following fines to DiGard Racing, Bud Moore Engineering, the Junior Johnson team, the M.C. Anderson team, and Hoss Ellington's team; the fines came when NASCAR chief Bill Gazaway announced that an unnamed team was caught with an illegal fuel cell and an official watched members of the above-mentioned teams at garage pay phones calling for legal fuel cells. Hank Williams, Jr. served as the honorary starter of this race; joining a list of celebrities that came before and after him like Bart Starr and Will Ferrell. Notable crew chiefs for this race included Tex Powell, Buddy Parrott, Jake Elder, Joey Arrington, Kirk Shelmerdine, Dale Inman, Harry Hyde, and Tim Brewer. The race covered 188 laps on the paved oval spanning on an atrociously hot weekend, and it was completed in three hours and four minutes with the lead changing hands 49 times among ten drivers.
Battlefield Earth received polarized mixed reviews, with some critics, and readers, considering the book Hubbard's most enjoyable sci-fi work and a classic of the genre, while others consider it to be genuinely terrible. The book had a negative reception from some literary critics: The Economist, for instance, called Battlefield Earth "an unsubtle saga, atrociously written, windy and out of control" while in the science fiction magazine Analog, Thomas Easton criticized it as "a wish- fulfillment fantasy wholly populated by the most one-dimensional of cardboard characters." Other critics pointed to the book's slipshod writing, such as "the ineffably klutzy destruction of the planet of the evil Psychlos by atomic bombs, which turns it into a 'radioactive sun'". Punch sarcastically commended Hubbard's "excellent understanding of evil impulses, particularly deviousness, which helps with the plot, and [he] is well-enough aware of his weaknesses not to dwell upon frailties like love, generosity, compassion".

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