Similar words: laboriously, obviously, dubiously, anxiously, previously, consciously, avariciously, glorious. Meaning: [nəʊ'tɔːrɪəslɪ] adv. to a notorious degree.
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(61) He was known to have made a fortune on the stock market, but was nonetheless notoriously tight-fisted.
(62) As Wolff notes, these wealth data are still preliminary and even in final form are notoriously difficult to draw conclusions from.
(63) On another occasion Moore, notoriously edgy about risking his neck, had to film with crocodiles in the Everglades.
(64) Her ability to keep the notoriously impatient monarch amused was greatly appreciated in royal circles.
(65) Although the Newtonian equations governing the elements are well known, long-term weather prediction is notoriously unreliable!
(66) He is notoriously tough on staff, often challenging them on facts and figures during council meetings.
(67) But employment in the building trade is notoriously irregular, and such artisans alternate self-employment with wage-paid work on the building sites.
(68) Local authorities have been notoriously lax in projecting aims and policies and facing up to weaknesses.
(69) But fiery activism or evasive quiescence are the poles of choice and the poles are notoriously uninhabitable.
(70) Graduate students in most institutions are notoriously late risers, who work way past conventional bedtime.
(71) Government growth projections for National Income have been notoriously unreliable, often excessively optimistic.
(72) Goods, especially ideological ones, have a habit of being tampered with in transit: they are notoriously subject to sea-changes.
(73) This is a great shame because scientists are notoriously bad at communicating the importance of what they study to non-scientists.
(74) Quality of tuition was notoriously difficult to judge: in-class assessment of teachers bore no correlation to examination results achieved.
(75) In fact, economists have proved notoriously inept at predicting upturns and downturns.
(76) Nuclear power stations are notoriously unreliable and construction costs go way over original estimates.
(77) Spitfire restorations to airworthy status have notoriously exceeded initial estimates of timing and cost, irrespective of start point condition.
(78) Autarky: Coordination between enterprises from different sectors and ministries is notoriously poor in the Soviet Union.
(79) Comet forecasting is notoriously risky, but some daredevils say the unusually large Hale-Bopp could be the brightest of the century.
(80) Notoriously, they hardly changed their spending habits when it ended.
(81) But hares were declining before paraquat was introduced, and the effects of agricultural chemicals on wildlife are notoriously difficult to assess.
(82) There had been no announcement of her substitution, but theatre people were notoriously careless about such things.
(83) As creative types, we're notoriously unpredictable, and thus liable to put our foot in it in front of touchy clients.
(84) Katmandu airport is notoriously tricky, located in a narrow saucer-shaped valley surrounded by snowy mountains and pine hills.
(84) Wish you will love sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
(85) In Britain the big cities were notoriously in the hands of the oligarchy of local businessmen.
(86) Our culture also cautions women not to raise pesky issues of parenting lest they frighten men off-men being notoriously reluctant fathers.
(87) But international lenders have notoriously short memories and start to lend again remarkably rapidly.
(88) Today's final 78 miles of stages are over the notoriously deceptive Yorkshire forest roads.
(89) The region's exposed position also means it's often notoriously windy.
(90) It may lend a certain dignity to the whole transaction but is notoriously slow.
More similar words: laboriously, obviously, dubiously, anxiously, previously, consciously, avariciously, glorious, subconsciously, raucously, fortuitously, simultaneously, curious, various, nefarious, imperious, penurious, delirious, gregarious, precarious, mysterious, lugubrious, motor, priority, historic, historian, rhetoric, historical, historically, rhetorically.