48 adverbs to describe how to commonest

Most remarkable is this method of blood supply for it is exceedingly common among the invertebrates and rare among the vertebrates.

His best and brightest remarks surprise us with the unexpectedness of homely common sense, as flashed on a world of organized illusions.

Elms of the second class, generally ranging from fourteen to eighteen feet, are comparatively common.

"Floggings for all offences, including deficiencies in work, are frightfully common, and most terribly severe.

She had even tried singing in a little music-hall, a horribly common place, but her voice had failed her.

I answered, with the stupid, ignorant reflection of other people's prejudices so sadly common, "No, I have never been there.

In Plato's Symposium (181) this point is made clear by Pausanias: "The Love who is the offspring of the common Aphrodite is essentially common, and has no discrimination, being such as the meaner sort of men feel, and is apt to be of women as well as of youths, and is of the body rather than of the soul....

At one of these reunions of the Blue and the Gray so happily common of late, a northern veteran, who had lost both arms and both legs in the service, caused himself to be posted in a conspicuous place to receive alms.

Crimes of violence were surprisingly common.

Yet after all, I know no work which gives a fairer measure of Mr. Maurice's intellect, both political and exegetic, and a fairer measure likewise, of the plain downright common sense which he brought to bear on each of so many subjects, than his Commentary on the very book which is supposed to have least connection with common sense, and on which common sense has as yet been seldom employed namely, the Apocalypse of St. John.

Tuberculosis was dreadfully common, and its victims were conveying it to others without let or hindrance.

Common is here put for variable, or not permanently settled in respect to quantity: in this sense, from which no third species ought to be inferred, our language is, perhaps, more extensively "common" than any other. (2.)

Externally common and prosaic in all her ways, she is yet thoroughly poetic, transfigured in our conception by her perfect love.

I am, SIR, Your most Humble Servant, T. D. Mr. SPECTATOR, I beg you would be pleased to take Notice of a very great Indecency, which is extreamly common, though, I think, never yet under your Censure.

fearfully common in it; and that vice, and unthrift, uncertain wages, and unhealthy dwellings produce there, as elsewhere, misery and savagery most deplorable.

Wife-beating is still a flagrantly common offence in England.

He gained the goodwill of his fellow-citizens by his unselfishness and generositytruly not too common in the bearing of men of his time.

There was work for the surgeon when the dead and injured of both sides at last were brought aboard the little steamer and ranged in a ghastly common row along the narrow deck.

The malady of blindness is grievously common in Palestine, the proportion of those thus afflicted being one in every hundred of the population, whereas in Europe the proportion is only one in a thousand.

It was such as have of late years become increasingly common in all our large cities, baffling the best detectives.

It's infinitely common to go there.

Either we have to let the big financial adventurers, the aggregating capitalist and his Press, in a loose, informal combination, rule the earth, either we have got to stand aside from preventive legislation and leave things to work out on their present lines, or we have to construct a collective organisation sufficiently strong for the protection of the liberties of the some-day-to-be-jolly common man.

They knew that such thingssuch outrages upon law and justicewere common.

These fields of experience that replace each other so punctually, each knowing the same matter, but in ever-widening contexts, from simplest feeling up to absolute knowledge, can they have no being in common when their cognitive function is so manifestly common?

The diamond has become notoriously common since every tradesman has taken to wearing it on his little finger.

48 adverbs to describe how to  commonest  - Adverbs for  commonest