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7 Sentences With "cloudily"

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

I stared cloudily into space at the warm colors, a tired sensation waving through my body.
The crystal cloudily caught the light from outside and slid from silvery-green to quartz-like almost instantaneously.
Coavinses' coffee-room is at the back, and the shadows of several gentlemen under a cloud loom cloudily upon the blinds.
The blue eyes seemed more cloudily blue than usual, and the crisp, sandy hair hinted more than ever of the pale straw-gold that was not there.
Served in a brandy snifter, piled high with pebbled ice, like a sno-cone, and garnished with an elaborately carved wedge of gala apple, it swirled cloudily in the glass, looking gloriously silly.
Adamson and Folland, p. 319 Effectively in retirement, Vane wrote the Retired Man's Meditations, published in 1655 amid rumors that Vane was fomenting rebellion against Cromwell, principally among Quakers and Fifth Monarchists.Adamson and Folland, p. 325 This work, a jargon- laden religious treatise in which Vane wanders between literal and symbolic interpretation of Biblical scriptures, was treated by contemporaries and later analysts, including David Hume, as "absolutely unintelligible" and "cloudily formed".Adamson and Folland, pp. 325–326 The same year, after Cromwell called for a fast day to consider methods by which his government might be improved, Vane wrote A Healing Question.
The Faerie Queene is an English epic poem by Edmund Spenser. Books IIII were first published in 1590, and then republished in 1596 together with books IVVI. The Faerie Queene is notable for its form: it is one of the longest poems in the English language as well as the work in which Spenser invented the verse form known as the Spenserian stanza. On a literal level, the poem follows several knights as a means to examine different virtues, and though the text is primarily an allegorical work, it can be read on several levels of allegory, including as praise (or, later, criticism) of Queen Elizabeth I. In Spenser's "Letter of the Authors", he states that the entire epic poem is "cloudily enwrapped in Allegorical devices", and the aim of publishing The Faerie Queene was to "fashion a gentleman or noble person in virtuous and gentle discipline".

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