Similar words: laboriously, obviously, dubiously, anxiously, previously, consciously, avariciously, glorious. Meaning: [nəʊ'tɔːrɪəslɪ] adv. to a notorious degree.
Random good picture Not show
(91) In his first year at City College he had taken nothing but remedial courses and the notoriously undemanding introductory black studies course.
(92) Tropical marine invertebrates, unlike marine fish which are notoriously difficult to successfully breed in captivity, are far more accommodating.
(93) The M-forty through Oxfordshire is notoriously prone to fog ... campaigners say overhead lighting is urgently needed to save lives.
(94) And here we are in one of the most notoriously capricious seas in the world, aboard a fantastic yacht called 2041.
(95) Potential listeners also are cautious about venturing on to a campus with circuitous roads, dense eucalyptus groves and notoriously problematic parking.
(96) Furthermore the sense in which we describe certain dilemmas, impulses, intuitions, or decisions as moral ones is notoriously imprecise.
(97) Britain has been notoriously ineffective in dealing with offences like financial fraud, market manipulation and insider dealing.
(98) His dress is famously unfashionable, his temper famously short, his profanities notoriously rich.
(99) The legal aid charity has helped overturn some notoriously unjust verdicts.
(100) But even notoriously conservative newspaper publishers recognize that the Web is a radical and powerful publishing medium.
(101) But many investors have proven to have notoriously short memories.
(102) I heave a sigh of resignation, knowing how notoriously difficult it is to put unity into words.
(103) Researching the prevalence of elder abuse is notoriously difficult,(sentencedict.com) and information on the abuse of black elders is non-existent.
(104) They are the traditional white grapes of Hermitage, though some growers have sworn off the notoriously fickle roussanne.
(105) Notoriously, long and gruelling work is needed to make the notion of political equality fit both these kinds of demand.
(106) In matters concerning his domestic life, Wakelate was notoriously sightless.
(107) Confession is good for the soul, particularly when it comes from journalists, who have a notoriously difficult time admitting error.
(108) Steering was never one of the Captain's strong points and the waters were notoriously treacherous.
(109) A Fortune 500 company in a notoriously competitive business sponsoring a workshop on fatherhood?
(110) The earnings of metal miners are notoriously difficult to estimate because intricate systems of payment by results produced wide fluctuations.
(111) Here the most notoriously violent clans of the two tribes are fighting along the Neretva river.
(112) Forest Service officials have been notoriously lax in pursuing forest clear cutting elsewhere.
(113) The reliability of sales figures, record charts and air play statistics is notoriously suspect.
(114) Smoothly synchronised endocrine function, an intrinsic factor in determining youthfulness, is also notoriously liable to become unbalanced through stress.sentence dictionary
(115) However, the establishment of cause and effect in education is notoriously difficult.
(116) Statistics can be notoriously unreliable, particularly in a sport as emotionally excitable as football.
(117) Though relatively healthy animals, state health officials warn that they are notoriously susceptible to bubonic plague.
(118) Children can be notoriously careless with their glasses or obstinately refuse to wear them.
(119) Unfortunately for our beloved Sean Elliott, the Spurs are notoriously soft underachievers come playoff time.
(120) Perhaps still more impressive is Corning's record in exploiting its technology through joint ventures, a notoriously difficult form of business.
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.