immoderately in English

adverb

in an extreme manner, excessively

Use "immoderately" in a sentence

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

1. His gravity made us laugh immoderately.

2. 17 Immoderately desirous of wealth or gain; greedy.

3. Immoderately desirous of wealth or gain; greedy.

4. To indulge oneself immoderately, as in wallowing in self-pity.

5. To indulge oneself immoderately, as wallowing in self - pity.

6. Cachinnating. Present participle for to laugh loudly, immoderately, or too often

7. Immoderately adhering to a belief, fashion, or course of action; extreme.

8. Dr. Ramsay, opening his mouth, threw back his head and laughed immoderately.

9. Experts, institutions, researches connected with the TV Home Shopping industry are immoderately short.

10. We laughed so immoderately that he had to dismiss us for that evening.

11. Binged , Binge·ing or bing·ing , bing·es To be immoderately

12. That is mainly showed on immoderately stylized artifice, which has transformed into pure-technique style of craftsman.

13. Antonyms for Ascetically include sybaritically, hedonistically, indulgently, intemperately, immoderately, decadently, extravagantly, lavishly, debauchedly and

14. Others still view marijuana, like alcohol, as a largely harmless indulgence, dangerous only when used immoderately.

15. He Chuckled immoderately and pressed his cowlick down, which defiant tuft popped instantly back to its position of attention

16. In the modern system of architecture, decoration is immoderately expensive, because it is both wrongly placed and wrongly finished.

17. Consequently, many student just chat on line or play computer games immoderately every day, skipping many important classes.

18. Binged, binge·ing or bing·ing, bing·es To be immoderately self-indulgent and unrestrained, especially in food or drink

19. Binged, binge·ing or bing·ing, bing·es To be immoderately self-indulgent and unrestrained, especially in food or drink

20. Mankind's behaviors of immoderately use the environment and resources suffered from the retaliation of environment, and then begin to study the sustainable development problem.

21. Rohmer flooded the screen with light and color—the film is one of the most beautiful ever made—and ever since that experience I have been immoderately grateful to him.

22. Cachinnate Definition: to laugh loudly or immoderately We have all heard the saying “laughter is the best medicine,” a tired old aphorism that was surely not coined by anyone who had spent time around a person who Cachinnates.

23. Cachinnation (n.) "loud laughter," 1620s, from Latin Cachinnationem (nominative cachinnatio) "violent laughter, excessive laughter," noun of action from past-participle stem of cachinnare "to laugh immoderately or loudly," of imitative origin

24. Once I saw Dan's Cowlick shake like the plume of an angry warrior as his wife turned toward him inquiringly.: He chuckled immoderately and pressed his Cowlick down, which defiant tuft popped instantly back to its position of attention.: Trousers may be brought to order in a few minutes, but to subdue a Cowlick is a matter of years.: From the top of his forehead to the Cowlick on the back of