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"fulsomely" Definitions
  1. in a way that is too generous in praising or thanking somebody, or in saying sorry, so that you do not sound sincere
"fulsomely" Synonyms
to the skies ardently effusively fervently profusely unreservedly very enthusiastically very highly without reserve excessively extravagantly immoderately inordinately hagiographically gushingly gushily unctuously oleaginously oilily soapily abundantly amply plentifully freely copiously extensively exuberantly luxuriantly fully greatly liberally richly generously lavishly prolifically substantially thoroughly aplenty bounteously disgustingly foully nastily sickeningly offensively repellently revoltingly distastefully repulsively loathsomely horribly nauseatingly odiously obnoxiously repugnantly dreadfully abhorrently awfully abominably horridly exaggeratedly overweeningly bloatedly steeply pretentiously hyperbolically theatrically extremely dramatically melodramatically preposterously sensationalistically exaltedly sensationally fabulously fantastically hammily histrionically unselfishly charitably benevolently magnanimously unstintingly bountifully munificently kindly altruistically philanthropically compassionately considerately bigheartedly selflessly openhandedly unsparingly disproportionately laboredly(US) labouredly(UK) needlessly unfairly unnecessarily unreasonably affectedly forcedly stagily beneficently ungrudgingly freehandedly orotundly grandiloquently oratorically pompously rhetorically bombastically flamboyantly floridly flowerily grandiosely ornately magniloquently convolutedly purplely rotundly tumidly turgidly inappropriately improperly unbecomingly indecorously inaptly unfittingly unseemlily unwarrantedly ineptly unseasonably unaptly unjustifiedly unjustifiably undeservedly unmeritedly unjustly superfluously suavely urbanely politely refinedly polishedly courteously sophisticatedly civilly graciously debonairly smoothly gallantly worldlily affably coolly charmingly dignifiedly obligingly tactfully diplomatically More

40 Sentences With "fulsomely"

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

Congress members tend to echo White House talking points fulsomely.
That would mean endorsing her fulsomely when he does admit defeat.
" Smith fulsomely praised Day, but added with a laugh, "He's got to win ballgames.
Williams writes intensely (he had a fierce work ethic) and enjoys himself nearly as fulsomely.
Turns out, Trump did both: he praised allies more fulsomely and attacked allies more harshly than any recent president.
Trump drew flack from critics and Democrats during the campaign for not fulsomely disavowing the alt-right and white supremacists.
It is only a matter of time before the outage beings to register more fulsomely across the country at the pump.
It fulsomely acknowledges its debt by declaring that it comes to confirm both the Torah and the Gospels — to renew their ethical traditions.
Trump, who has yet to appoint an ambassador to Turkey, has gone further, fulsomely calling Erdogan "a friend of mine" who gets "very high marks" for his leadership.
He is in the last two weeks of a general election campaign, and while Mr. Trump praises him fulsomely, the American president is also widely unpopular in Britain.
A White House official confirmed that both calls happened, but declined to disclose the content of each conversation, leaving in question how fulsomely the President backed his EPA head.
And if you would argue that historical data does not support Henry's account, which brims fulsomely with the misty clichés of biographical writing — well, you're just being pedantic, aren't you?
Rosenstein wrote a memo that claimed James Comey, the former F.B.I. director, was fired for his handling of the Hillary Clinton inquiry that Trump and Sessions had once praised fulsomely.
And not all of Europe's right-wing populists praise Facebook quite as fulsomely as Salvini does; Farage has accused the platform of harboring its own liberal bias and of censoring conservatives.
In the space of ten minutes, Scarborough went from being a steady font of right-wing outrage and hostility, to being fulsomely embraced as a breath of fresh air on cable news.
Foreign policy dictated by domestic policy Trump's foreign policy is often calculated to advance his domestic political goals -- one reason why he has so fulsomely embraced Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his aspirations.
Her heart beat with amazement and she impulsively crossed the street, hesitated, then got in line behind a cluster of middle-aged women, who were being greeted fulsomely by the gentleman at the door.
She told reporters that she didn't make her decision until she walked onto the Senate floor for the vote, and that she expects to explain her thinking more fulsomely during a Senate floor speech Friday.
These men love their guns like Donald Trump loves Ivanka, fondling them fulsomely with a half-smile cocked on their face—auto-erotically charged from too many Clint Eastwood movies and episodes of Duck Dynasty.
"President Trump, through counsel, declined to assert any privilege over Mr. McGahn's testimony, so Mr. McGahn answered the special counsel team's questions fulsomely and honestly, as any person interviewed by federal investigators must," he said.
If we were to fulsomely expose it in such a way that would be completely persuasive to everyone, we can just kiss that off," Clapper said, adding, "That will imperil our ability to provide such intelligence in the future.
"Lombard Street", his analysis of a Victorian banking panic, still provides central bankers with their template for what to do in a crisis, as Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve during the crisis of 2008, fulsomely acknowledges.
It would also make it harder for Mrs Clinton to argue, as she did fulsomely in South Carolina, that as president she would honour the legacy of Mr Obama, of whom most Democratic voters, but especially black ones, strongly approve.
In the first part of the Oresteia (458 B.C.), a trilogy of tragedies by Aeschylus, the queen fulsomely welcomes her husband home from Troy; then she lures him into a bathtub and hacks him and his Trojan concubine to death.
To wit: the fulsomely padded body stocking that is being modeled with flair and poignancy by Zainab Jah in the title role of Suzan-Lori Parks's "Venus," which opened in a patchy revival on Monday night at the Pershing Square Signature Center.
" McGahn's personal attorney, William Burck, said in a statement Saturday, "President Trump, through counsel, declined to assert any privilege over Mr. McGahn's testimony, so Mr. McGahn answered the Special Counsel team's questions fulsomely and honestly, as any person interviewed by federal investigators must.
The theory of the Biden presidency, which the candidate has fulsomely advanced, is that once he's installed in the Oval Office, the fog will lift, the minds of Republicans will clear, and together, everyone will walk hand in hand into a new era of bipartisan comity and substantive debate.
These ideas include encouraging "innovative [Medicare Advantage] benefit structures and plan designs"—"innovation" being the jollier term for privatization in the Trump era—and ensuring that the government doesn't promote regular Medicare ahead of Medicare Advantage, which probably means directing the government to more fulsomely promote Medicare Advantage.
But the authors' understanding of American religion seems to start and end with Google searches and anti-evangelical tracts, and their intended attack on Trumpery expands and expands, conflating very different political and religious tendencies, indulging in paranoia about obscure theocratic Protestants and fringe Catholic websites, and ultimately critiquing every kind of American religious conservatism — including the largely anti-political Benedict Option and the pro-life activism fulsomely supported by Francis' papal predecessors — as dangerously illiberal, "theopolitical," Islamic State-esque, "Manichaean," a return to the old integralism that the church no longer supports.
Yanow, S. [ Allmusic Review:Together] accessed 13 January 2015 At The Penguin Guide to Jazz reviewers Richard Cook and Brian Morton says: ""Together" delivers fulsomely, a warm, approachable album which does not lack for subtleties. Recommended".
On 28 June 1979 Siebold was sacked by the Chairman of the Council of State, Willi Stoph. His dismissal came without official plaudits, in eloquent contrast to the treatment afforded to Kurt Fichtner, the other minister dismissed at the same time: Fichter was fulsomely thanked for his work.
Tom Milne of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Fulsomely cradled in slow motion and caressing dissolves, sprinkled with cultural references to Dante and idealistic philosophies, indulging much lachrymose drivel about first love and its irreparable loss, this Son of Love Story similarly tries to prove that the spirit of romance is not dead and proceeds to administer a cruel coup de grâce." Michael Eisner of Paramount said the film did not lose money "but was not a success".
In York the City Council led by George Leeman were demanding money for the Lendal Bridge project and many of Hudson's allies were unseated at local elections that year. The shareholders that had so fulsomely praised Hudson for the large dividends paid now lined up against him. In the Midland Railway meeting of 15 February 1849 there were calls for a committee of inquiry to be set up which Hudson managed to quash by threatening to resign.
The Assembly met for nine sessions, ending on Monday 1 June 1795, with a sermon and prayer by Meek. The minutes of these sessions take up 100 pages of closely written manuscript. (GUL Reference GB 0247 MS Gen 1159). The Assembly humbly received King George III’s Commission, which was in Latin, and replied to it loyally and fulsomely. It also received the king’s news that his son, Prince George (later, the Prince Regent) was to be married to Princess Caroline of Brunswick.
In an effort to identify Clyn's purpose in writing his annals, Bernadette Williams states: > "They are not a house chronicle, a town chronicle or a political history. > ...the difference between a city and county annalist is quite evident; Clyn > was not a member of the burgage population of Kilkenny but a man of the > countryside. ... The reality is that Clyn was writing a military history of > the geographical area of Kilkenny and Tipperary ... his audience was either > the military men of that area or more specifically a military family such as > the de la Freignes." Indeed, the latter family are mentioned fulsomely in his annals.
In some Orthodox traditions, caviar is permitted on Lazarus Saturday, the Saturday before Palm Sunday, although the day is otherwise a fast day. Married couples also abstain from sexual activity on fast days so that they may devote themselves fulsomely to prayer (). While it may seem that fasting in the manner set forth by the Church is a strict rule, there are circumstances where a person's spiritual guide may allow an Economy because of some physical necessity (e.g. those who are pregnant or infirm, the very young and the elderly, or those who have no control over their diet, such as prisoners or soldiers).
In his letter of accreditation, Fulk of Villaret fulsomely praised Albert's "discretion, honesty, loyalty, good administrative skills, diligence, and hard work". Among his major tasks in this post was the absorption of the property of the recently dissolved Knights Templar, which had been transferred to the Hospitallers in May 1312. By 1315, Albert was back in Cyprus (he may be the grand preceptor who survived from a shipwreck early in the year) as preceptor of the island, a post he kept until his resignation in 1317, when the Pope demanded that the responsions for Cyprus be once again paid in full. For the next three years, Albert was active in campaigns against the Turkish raiders around the Order's new base at Rhodes.
It was the lowest tender and duly accepted. However, this decision was rescinded about two weeks later and fresh tenders were called. That of W. J. Anderson was accepted around 21 April. At last, construction could begin. The new dressing pavilion, designed to accommodate the needs of 2,000 persons, and the nearby refreshment kiosk were opened on 12 November 1938 in front of several hundred spectators by the Minister for Works and Local Government, Eric Spooner. The new buildings were described fulsomely in the Illawarra Mercury: :'The modern design of the new buildings adds a distinct beauty to the beach and the composite picture is one that would be hard to equal in Australia...The dressing pavilion is 250 feet [76.2 metres] in length, and 34 feet [10.36 metres] wide.
Emperor Michael III and "Basilikinos" in imperial garb, from the Madrid Skylitzes By 866, Basiliskianos had risen to the rank of patrikios, and was serving in the imperial household (koiton), being one of Emperor Michael III's close companions. On 1 September of that year, after a chariot race at the palace of Saint Mamas (in modern Beşiktaş), Basiliskianos congratulated the emperor so fulsomely on his victory that, according to the chroniclers, the delighted Michael ordered him to take from his own feet the red imperial boots (tzangia) and put them on himself. This provoked the displeasure of Michael's co-emperor Basil the Macedonian, a man of humble origin who had risen to power through his own close relationship with Michael. Michael, seeing Basil's disapproval, became angry, and threatened to make Basiliskianos co-emperor in Basil's place.
Chisholm in 1911 argued however that, if the references to the imperial administration are carefully scanned, they will be seen to be extravagant neither in kind nor in number: few will now grudge Tiberius, when his whole action as a ruler is taken into account, such a title as salutaris princeps, which seemed to a former generation a specimen of shameless adulation. A quarter of a century later still, however, H J Rose claimed that Valerius “cares nothing for historical truth if by neglecting it he can flatter Tiberius, which he does most fulsomely”.H J Rose, A Handbook of Latin Literature (London 1966) p. 356 Chisholm also maintained that the few allusions to Caesar's murderers and to Augustus hardly pass beyond the conventional style of the writer's day; and that the only passage which can fairly be called fulsome is the violently rhetorical tirade against Sejanus.

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