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16 Sentences With "most explosively"

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

Perhaps most explosively, Manning helped unearth video of a US helicopter strike near Baghdad that left two journalists dead.
They all have seemingly intractable problems—most explosively, in Hong Kong—but it is a mistake to write them off.
Most explosively, she maintains that the King of Pop's 2009 death was far from an accident, but rather the result of a conspiracy.
Also, most explosively, from the victim herself: a doctor who treated Mrs McIver recalled that she "said it was an accident without me prompting".
They began publishing testimonies of those who had suffered sexual abuse at the hands of Ketcham—and, most explosively, the ABWE documents Kim had obtained.
The agency ran a series of experiments, placing laptops inside typical suitcases next to your standard flammable toiletries: nail polish remover, hand sanitizer, and most explosively, an aerosol can of dry shampoo.
No charges were brought, but several were investigated: the late Lord Brittan, a former home secretary; Field Marshall Lord Bramall; Harvey Proctor, a former MP; and, most explosively, the late Sir Edward Heath, prime minister in 1970-74.
TikTok is now Byte's biggest competition, as the app has fast-become one of the most explosively popular platforms ever created and has largely taken up the short-form video mantle from Vine after Instagram and Snapchat matured into less teen-oriented and more ad-friendly platforms.
" Lee and Ainsley write that Mueller's investigators appear to be particularly interested in the question of what the president knew about Flynn's shifting stories and, most explosively, whether Trump directed Flynn "to lie to senior officials, including [Vice President Mike] Pence, or the FBI, and if so why.
Entertainment Weekly film critic Owen Gleiberman stated that Stone "may be the most under-celebrated great documentary filmmaker in America." His films Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst (2004) and Oswald's Ghost (2008) both received Emmy nominations for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking; Gleiberman hailed them as "two of the most explosively insightful documentaries of the last decade". For Earth Days (2009), Stone received a nomination for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Screenplay.
The film received positive reviews from critics. Variety called it "rib-tickling filmfare", noting that the series of adventures aboard ship "are run off smartly and help to disguise fact that there’s practically no plot". This review also cited Cooper's performance for "sharpening up the entertainment values". Bosley Crowther of The New York Times praised the screenplay, acting, and directing, calling it "the most explosively funny service picture that has come along since the nickelodeon versions of the sinking of the battleship Maine".
Baroclinic instability has been cited as one of the principal mechanisms for the development of most explosively deepening cyclones. However, the relative roles of baroclinic and diabatic processes in explosive deepening of extratropical cyclones have been subject to debate (citing case studies) for a long time. Other factors include the relative position of a 500-hPa trough and thickness patterns, deep tropospheric frontogenetic processes which happen both upstream and downstream of the surface low, the influence of air–sea interaction, and latent heat release.
Television columnist Alan Sepinwall for The Star-Ledger wrote that the episode was "easily the best 30 Rock of the season, and one of the series' best episodes to date". He complimented Robert Carlock for "[zooming] in on the narcissistic worldview" of the Dennis character as it "cranked those qualities up to appropriately absurd 30 Rock proportions." In addition, Sepinwall wrote that all of the elements featured in the episode "all came together". Bob Sassone of AOL's TV Squad was similarly laudatory, writing that it was "one of the most explosively hysterical and imaginative half hours of TV this season, and one of this show's best episodes ever".
At Cannes, the film shocked some critics with its long and graphic sex scenes (although fake genitalia were used),Cannes 2013 : les scènes les plus sexe du Festival – Le Figaro leading them to state that the film may require some editing before it is screened in cinemas. Several critics placed the film as the front-runner to win the Palme d'Or. The judging panel, which included Steven Spielberg, Ang Lee, and Nicole Kidman, made an unprecedented move to award the Palme d'Or to the film's two main actresses along with the director. Jury President Steven Spielberg explained: Justin Chang, writing for Variety, said that the film contains "the most explosively graphic lesbian sex scenes in recent memory".
That same year saw Sillett play for a Great Britain side against a Rest Of Europe team to celebrate the Irish Football Association's 75th anniversary at Belfast's Windsor Park in a team that also comprised Danny Blanchflower, John Charles and Stanley Matthews. Sillett was a cultured distributor of the ball,his positional play was astute and he was exceptionally cool under pressure but it was as one of the most explosively powerful dead ball kickers of his and any era that earns him most renown. Indeed, Peter was a menace anywhere within 40 yards of the opponents' goal and was the author of some of the most spectacular strikes ever seen at Stamford Bridge. In fact opponents' often used to place defensive "walls" even when Sillett struck free kicks from the halfway line such was his power and accuracy.
Supreme City transports readers to the 1920s, the Age of Jazz and the Age of Ambition. City of the Century: The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America (Simon and Schuster, 1996): Miller explores Chicago’s growth from a desolate fur-trading post in the 1830s to one of the world's most explosively alive cities by 1900. He follows Chicago's wild beginnings, its reckless growth, its natural calamities (especially the Great Fire of 1871), its raucous politics, its empire-building businessmen, its world-transforming architecture, its rich mix of cultures, its community of young writers and journalists, and its staggering engineering projects—which included the reversal of the Chicago River and raising the entire city from prairie mud to save it from devastating cholera epidemics. The Kingdom of Coal: Work, Enterprise, and Ethnic Communities in the Mine Fields (with Richard E. Sharpless, 1989): A survey of the rise and fall of the anthracite mining industry in Pennsylvania.

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