insistently in English

adverb

persistently; emphatically, assertively; urgently

Use "insistently" in a sentence

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

1. The bell rang again insistently.

2. Belabor: to speak or write about insistently and usually tiresomely

3. I looked at her so insistently that my eye caught hers.

4. Belaboring: to speak or write about insistently and usually tiresomely

5. "What is it?" his wife asked again, gently but insistently.

6. These are the questions which we should think and explore insistently.

7. Yet the drama and the dramatic personality still insistently break through.

8. And he kept repeating this nonsense insistently that finally they grew alarmed.

9. Synonyms for Compellingly include urgently, insistently, eagerly, earnestly, frantically, hastily, vigorously, anxious, beseechingly and emotionally

10. The sponsoring group must insistently be portrayed as friendly, hopeful, welcoming, and benign.

11. This morning several countries addressed this point insistently: Argentina, Algeria, Pakistan and Croatia

12. Five minutes later, the alarm wakes him again, cheeping insistently like a mechanical bird.

13. We must continue to cry out humbly yet insistently to God: Rouse yourself!

14. She turned to slip away, but the four men just laughed and applauded her insistently.

15. Synonyms for Beseechingly include entreatingly, imploringly, insistently, hastily, compellingly, earnestly, frantically, vigorously, eagerly and importunately

16. Accost: To approach and speak to, especially aggressively or insistently, as with a demand or request.

17. Five minutes later, the alarm wakes him again, cheeping insistently like a mechanical bird. Sentencedict.com

18. One of them managed to make it to the door and pounded on the doorbell insistently.

19. Daligence means insistently, it did not means the work with all - out and endless and night.

20. Irrelevantly , insistently, scores of times, he wondered when they would come on and what they looked like.

21. Still Rhett did not look at her. His eyes were bent insistently on Melanie's white face.

22. Agitation: Of the above grievances we not hesitate to complain, and to complain loudly and insistently.

23. Irrelevantly , insistently, scores of times, he wondered when they would come on what they looked like.

24. Both solemn and very funny, it insistently finds poetry in the projects, dignity on the street.

25. Certainly they now boasted insistently of the marital bliss of their daughter and the solid Civil Service progress of their son.

26. They paid handsomely for a public-relations campaign that insistently denied any proof of a causal connection between smoking and cancer.

27. In Latin America two missionaries shared in giving a public talk on the patio of the home of an interested person while fireworks were going off in the nearby plaza and a rooster was crowing insistently nearby!

28. Harris argues that 'a strikingly wide array of sixteenth- and seventeenthcentury forms of English literary and cultural activity-devotional lyric verse, urban Chorography, vitalist philosophy, and, most insistently, Shakespeare's own drama-expound or enact theories of the polychronic nature of matter' (4).

29. Clamour - utter or proclaim insistently and noisily; "The delegates Clamored their disappointment" clamor give tongue to , utter , express , verbalise , verbalize - articulate; either verbally or with a cry, shout, or noise; "She expressed her anger"; "He uttered a curse"

30. Solness (Confidingly): Don't you believe with me, Hilda, that there are certain special, chosen people who have a gift and power and capacity to wish something, desire something, will something--so insistently and so--so inevitably--that at last it has to be theirs?

31. Cheep From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Cheep Cheep / tʃiːp / verb [ intransitive ] HBP SOUND if a young bird Cheeps, it makes a weak high noise chicks Cheeping for food — Cheep noun [ countable ] → See Verb table Examples from the Corpus Cheep • Five minutes later, the alarm wakes him again, Cheeping insistently like a

32. Clamor: 1 v utter or proclaim insistently and noisily “The delegates Clamored their disappointment” Synonyms: clamour Type of: express , give tongue to , utter , verbalise , verbalize articulate; either verbally or with a cry, shout, or noise v make loud demands “he Clamored for justice and tolerance” Synonyms: clamour Type of: demand request