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8 Sentences With "augustly"

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

The sun and the light had disappeared from the sky and the heavens had grown augustly gray.
It looks photo-op fabulous, with its augustly shabby, nicotine-stained pressroom (by Douglas W. Schmidt) and costumes (by Ann Roth).
Clinton was so busy going about the business of slandering Trump as augustly unqualified that she all but forgot to build an inspiring, motivational case for why she'd be a much better president.
Compelled by the augustly named federal Uniform Time Act of 1966, most Americans will leap ahead — or stumble blearily — from one configuration of the clock to another this weekend, as daylight saving time clicks in at 2 a.m. Sunday.
Notice how augustly the patriotic hero takes his seat in a pew next to his sanely amused, age-appropriate wife, Clemmie, at the wedding of the young Princess Elizabeth to Lt. Philip Mountbatten of the Royal Navy, formerly the Prince of Greece and Denmark and newly the Duke of Edinburgh, Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich of Greenwich.
The Yellow Jacket, Augustly Revived, The New York Times, November 10, 1916, pg. 11.
Thereupon it was intoxicated with drinking, > and all [the heads] lay down and slept. Then His-Swift-Impetuous-Male- > Augustness drew the ten-grasp saber, that was augustly girded on him, and > cut the serpent in pieces, so that the River Hi flowed on changed into a > river of blood. So when he cut the middle tail, the edge of his august sword > broke. Then, thinking it strange, he thrust into and split [the flesh] with > the point of his august sword and looked, and there was a great sword > [within].
Kirkus Reviews called it "a superb panoramic view of history with a somewhat misleading subtitle, for the emphasis is so largely British that the America aspects take definitely second place", The New Yorker "a more than ordinarily serious entry in a frequently trumped-up field", and The Booklist and Subscription Books Bulletin "an inviting historical summary for casual reading"; the Times Literary Supplement found the illustrations good in themselves but inaccurately captioned, the New York Herald Tribune thought that "the real past we share with the English was a broader, harsher, more dynamic and far more astonishing saga of conquest than this genteel survey suggests", The New York Times that "the luminous histories of our two peoples have not been dovetailed at all (as the title implied they would be) but rather set side by side to languish augustly in isolation from one another", but the Chicago Sunday Tribune believed that "this gallery of a pictured past is as rewarding as any the reader is likely to tour for some time". Alan Hodge remained until his death the co-editor with Peter Quennell of History Today. He died at the age of 63 on 25 May 1979.

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