Similar words: famous, infamous, world-famous, enormously, anonymously, synonymously, unanimously, posthumously. Meaning: adv. 1. in a manner or to an extent that is well known 2. in a splendid manner.
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61. Woolf was famously undomesticated while the more home-oriented Bell needed someone to help look after her children while she carried on with her work as a painter—and her love affairs.
62. Precious of black agaric sufficient hill , sufficient also feed medicine famously to hold concurrently with bacterium.
63. Co-star Humphrey Bogart was dismissive of her, but William Holden and she got along famously -- very famously.
64. When he famously declared that “I believe in justice, but I will defend my mother before justice,” he was denounced as a colonial apologist.
65. The son of a stonemason, born around 469BC, Socrates was famously odd.
66. In fact, Sting's wife Trudie Styler once famously boasted that her husband could make love for more than 5 hours at a time!
67. He famously returned 196 % that year amid the dot - com bubble.
68. Though I am poor and wretched now, my progenitors were famously wealthy.
69. John Keats famously spent his dying years penning sonnets to his beloved Fanny Brawne.
70. Q 3 . In depictions of God Rama , he is famously holding what in his right hand?
71. In other cases, severe deviations from Raoult's law and Dalton's law are observed, most famously in the mixture of ethanol and water.
72. Meanwhile they were progressing famously, and John Bunsby was in high hope.
73. His ( or rather, his wife's ) health - care scheme famously collapsed.
74. One of these, Linear B, was famously deciphered in 1952, making it Europe's earliest readable writing (see "The great decipherments").
75. Democrats lost strength in the Senate and their majority in the House of Representatives on November 2 in elections Obama described famously as a "shellacking", or heavy beating.
76. When the energy outfit famously collapsed a year later, he went into business for himself, founding Centaurus, a hedge fund focusing mostly on natural gas and energy trading.
77. In depictions of God Rama, he is famously holding what in his right hand?
78. THE 1950s and '60s brought many new things to American offices, including the Xerox machine, word processing and — perhaps less famously — the first National Secretaries Day, in 1952.
79. In 1971 its famously luxurious passenger service was sold to Amtrak.
80. One of the staple foods of the famously long-lived centenarians in the Hunza valley of the Himalayas is the apricot.
81. My uncle Murray was a pianist who could sight-read the most famously complex masterpieces.
82. Thucydides famously attributed the Peloponnesian War to the rise in power of Athens and the fear it created in Sparta.
83. " still write down famously " lily magnolia demit " ?
84. Jorge Luis Borges, the most famous of the country's writers[Sentencedict], once famously pronounced that "our entire country is imported; everyone here is really from somewhere else".
85. The Pashtuns are, famously, the largest tribal society in the world.
86. Daniel Boone famously blazed the Wilderness Road through the gap, which enabled white migration to the Northwest Territory.
87. The evolutionist famously spent little of his time studying or in lectures, preferring to shoot, ride and collect beetles.
88. Capuchin monkeys are famously shrewd and resourceful primates, the New World equivalent of chimpanzees.
89. The Ford Pinto was a famously bad automobile, but worse still might be Ford's handling of the safety concerns surrounding the '70s-era subcompact.
90. Sodium montmorillonite can be freeze-dried into a spongelike material known as an aerogel. Aerogels are famously fragile.
More similar words: famous, infamous, world-famous, enormously, anonymously, synonymously, unanimously, posthumously, glamourous, monogamous, joyously, piously, callously, tediously, hideously, copiously, riotously, jealously, ominously, ruinously, raucously, nervously, piteously, anxiously, arduously, furiously, dubiously, curiously, seriously, viciously.