glaringly in English

adverb

with a piercing intense gaze; penetratingly; prominently, obviously

Use "glaringly" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "glaringly" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "glaringly", or refer to the context using the word "glaringly" in the English Dictionary.

1. The environment is glaringly absent from those priorities.

2. But I remember clearly... that it was a glaringly sunny day.

3. Synonyms for Blatantly include glaringly, obviously, clearly, plainly, evidently, patently, unmistakably, manifestly, conspicuously and apparently

4. "Affliction" portrays the nuanced small moments and the glaringly obvious stabs of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, in excruciating clarity

5. "Affliction" portrays the nuanced small moments and the glaringly obvious stabs of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, in excruciating clarity

6. So, modern Roman Catholic scholarship has glaringly moved backward in its position on these five books as the inspired writings of Moses.

7. The Artillery arm soon after joining the Army in 1870 but that the official record was sparse and, sometimes, glaringly erroneous

8. When “faced with facts that glaringly implicate the client, lawyers must often create stories for the jury to tell itself in order to look past those facts and vote for an acquittal,” states the Times.

9. This has never been more glaringly obvious than this year, when students were suddenly forced to do school from home, stripped off the constant, physical, Chivying presence of an educator, and are utterly collapsing under the compounded challenge of self-motivating while

10. As I have already mentioned, it would be glaringly inconsistent with the purpose of appeal proceedings if the Court of Justice were now to revisit all the evidence adduced and substitute its assessment of that evidence for the assessment made by the General Court.

11. Blatant (adj.) coined 1596 by Edmund Spenser in "The Faerie Queen," in Blatant beast, a thousand-tongued monster representing slander; perhaps primarily alliterative, perhaps suggested by Latin blatire "to babble." It entered general use by 1650s as "noisy in an offensive and vulgar way;" the sense of "obvious, glaringly conspicuous" is from 1889.