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6 Sentences With "most supremely"

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

SPI boasted the most supremely attractive sales force in America.
Their strategy revolved around beating LeBron up and forcing him to exert more energy than even the most supremely prepared athlete possibly could.
Especially given the fact that it's Republicans who have put two celebrities in the highest office in all the land: first, Ronald Reagan, who was an outspoken actor and president of the Screen Actors Guild before becoming president of, you know, the country; and now 28 years later, the mouthiest, most supremely unqualified celebrity-cum-candidate of all time — Donald Trump.
Still, "it's also far too difficult to accurately express the rousing beauty of the fact that in a period of intense suffering van Gogh was somehow able to perceive and represent one of the most supremely difficult concepts nature has ever brought before mankind, and to unite his unique mind's eye with the deepest mysteries of movement, fluid, and light," as Natalya St. Clair notes in a TED-Ed Original.
Other interpreters point out that neither the books of Samuel nor Jewish tradition documents sanctioned romantic or erotic physical intimacy between the two characters, which the Bible elsewhere makes evident when between heterosexuals, most supremely in the Song of Solomon. It is also known that covenants were common, and that marriage was a public event and included customs not seen in this story.Albert Barnes, Judges 14:10Sketches of Jewish Social Life. Cp. 9 (Edersheim) The platonic interpretation of David and Jonathan's relationship is advocated by the religious writer Robert A. J. GagnonThe Bible and Homosexual Practice.
The Exhibition is a key location in the P.G. Wodehouse short story, 'The Rummy Affair of Old Biffy', in which Sir Roderick Glossop describes it as "the most supremely absorbing and educational collection of objects, both animate and inanimate, gathered from the four corners of the Empire, that has ever been assembled in England’s history." Bertie Wooster is somewhat less impressed, remarking that "millions of people, no doubt, are so constituted that they scream with joy and excitement at the spectacle of a stuffed porcupine-fish or a glass jar of seeds from Western Australia – but not Bertram" and sneaks off to the Planters’ Bar in the West Indian section for a Green Swizzle. The British Empire Exhibition features in David Lean’s 1944 film This Happy Breed, starring Celia Johnson. In Sir John Betjeman's celebrated Metro-Land (1973) the poet recalls his childhood experience of the exhibition in the 'Wembley' segment. In Charlie Higson’s Young Bond novel SilverFin (Puffin, 2005), the young James Bond is impressed by the height of the rollercoaster at the British Empire Exhibition in 1925.

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