Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

6 Sentences With "more horribly"

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

Even more horribly, men who do housework have less sex than those who don't!
Clearly, overworked, undertrained human moderators aren't going to stop Facebook making more horribly damaging mistakes.
The mood in the tent is even more horribly tense than usual — Nadiya declares she'd rather have another baby than make another soufflé.
Not I." Clytemnestra arrives at Aulis filled with happiness over her daughter's prospective wedding the famous Myrmidon leader, Achilles. Iphigenia's first meeting with her father is couched in double entendre which is devastating: as she talks about her upcoming wedding, he talks about her upcoming sacrifice. They use the same words, but the meanings could not be more horribly apart. When Agamemnon meets with Clytemnestra, he still vainly tries to convince her to return to Argos without witnessing the "wedding.
The sinners are thrown into it and boiled there, while they utter horrid cries of 'Agony; they are made to drink molten lead and copper when they are thirsty, and they shriek still more horribly. Those evildoers who have here forfeited their souls' (happiness) for the sake of small (pleasures), and have been born in the lowest births during hundred thousands of million years will stay in this (hell). Their punishment will be adequate to their deeds. The wicked who have committed crimes will atone for them, deprived of all pleasant and lovely objects, by dwelling in the stinking crowded hell, a scene of pain, which is full of flesh.
According to David Allen Harvey, Voltaire often invoked racial differences as a means to attack religious orthodoxy, and the Biblical account of creation. His most famous remark on slavery is found in Candide, where the hero is horrified to learn "at what price we eat sugar in Europe" after coming across a slave in French Guiana who has been mutilated for escaping, who opines that, if all human beings have common origins as the Bible taught, it makes them cousins, concluding that "no one could treat their relatives more horribly". Elsewhere, he wrote caustically about "whites and Christians [who] proceed to purchase negroes cheaply, in order to sell them dear in America". Voltaire has been accused of supporting the slave trade as per a letter attributed to him,Davis, David Brion, The problem of slavery in Western culture (New York: Oxford University Press 1988) p.

No results under this filter, show 6 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.