inordinately in English

adverb

excessively; in an unrestrained manner; in a disorderly manne

Use "inordinately" in a sentence

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

1. She's inordinately fond of her parrot.

2. He is inordinately proud of his wife's achievements.

3. She was inordinately fond of her pets.

4. Arabs are inordinately proud of their linguistic heritage.

5. With rare exceptions, it was also inordinately expensive.

6. The other person who loved Joey inordinately was the Monaghan girl, Connie.

7. But if you are determined to accumulate wealth, it isn't inordinately difficult.

8. But the residents are inordinately preoccupied with propriety, and nothing at all is funny.

9. Gruff and inordinately self-reliant, Gordon was highly conservative in attitude, theology, and lifestyle.

10. One afternoon that spring the weather became inordinately hot, boiling up to midsummer levels.

11. You are inordinately curious about and proud of everything that comes out of your body.

12. They fretted that their personnel responsibilities would be inordinately demanding of their time and energy.

13. I had made a big profit on the deal and was feeling inordinately pleased with myself.

14. Inordinately large doses in man may cause death by interference with gaseous exchange due pulmonary edema.

15. When a fox held their attention for an inordinately long time, I knew I was in trouble.

16. The paradox is that when sex is problematic, it plays an inordinately powerful, negative role in new marriages.

17. One night last week I found myself having an inordinately good time at a holiday dinner with friends.

18. The absurd thing is that it should be the soul of this body which it transcends so inordinately.

19. With its inordinately valuable and trusted brand at stake in the Washington Post, the risks are clearly high.

20. Covet definition, to desire wrongfully, inordinately, or without due regard for the rights of others: to Covet another's property

21. I was surprised because there seemed to be an inordinately high proportion of Canadian garbage references among Oxford dictionaries.

22. He almost single-handedly brokered a peace deal with secessionist rebels in Chechnya last fall, thereby ending an inordinately bloody war.

23. As a adjective Ambitious is possessing, or controlled by ambition; greatly or inordinately desirous of power, honor, office, superiority, or distinction.

24. Ambitiosus { adjective masculine } possessing, or controlled by, ambition Possessing, or controlled by ambition; greatly or inordinately desirous of power, honor, office, superiority, or distinction.

25. Coveted definition, wrongfully or inordinately desired:Pizarro led a party of conquistadores in an attempt to discover El Dorado—the source of the Coveted gold of the Incas

26. The first cases of AIDS probably occurred in 19 but the disease was not noticed until an inordinately large number of young men with KS was reported.

27. Exceptionally, very, highly, greatly, quite, severely, terribly, utterly, unusually, manifestly, extraordinarily, intensely, markedly, awfully (informal), acutely, exceedingly, excessively, inordinately, uncommonly He made it Abundantly clear that he didn't like me.

28. CLINICAL VALIDITY INDEX NARRATIVES The Basc-3 F Index is a classically derived infrequency scale, designed to assess the possibility that a rater has depicted a child's behavior in an inordinately negative fashion

29. As a noun Ambitiousness is the state or quality of being ambitious. As a adjective ambitious is possessing, or controlled by ambition; greatly or inordinately desirous of power, honor, office, superiority, or distinction.

30. Such a panic was set off in August 2007 by inordinately blowing up the dangers to the world financial system inherent in a mere $400 to $600 billion of securities backed by U.S. subprime mortgages.

31. Covet (v.) mid-13c., "to desire or wish for inordinately or without regard for the rights of others," from Old French coveitier "Covet, desire, lust after" (12c., Modern French convoiter, influenced by con-words), probably ultimately from Latin cupiditas "passionate desire, eagerness, ambition," from cupidus "very desirous," from cupere "long for, desire" (see cupidity).