31 adverbs to describe how to discard

The doctor had temporarily discarded his theory that it is better to rise from the table feeling slightly hungry.

They have discarded you utterly.

This was all excellent, no doubt; so were the diaries I sometimes tried to keep, but always and very speedily discarded, finding them a school of posturing and melancholy self-deception.

In fact, his political elevation after Caesar's death soon became very exalted, and the various democratic arts by which he had sought to raise himself to it, being now no longer necessary, were, as usual in such cases, gradually discarded.

Yet, as she always did open it for him, or for any other of their special friends whom she chanced to see approaching, she promptly discarded this line of conduct as absurd, and threw the door wide with the hospitable sweep to which he was so accustomed that he would have been surprised and puzzled at its absence.

She has married, to the astonishment of the world in general, that 'excellent man,' Mr. O'Blareaway, who has been discovered not to be quite as young as he appeared, his graces being principally owing to a Brutus wig, which he has now wisely discarded.

Into this circle of modern scientific categories are articulated, further, Galileo's new conception of motion and the conception of atoms, which, previously employed by physicists, as Daniel Sennert (1619) and others, is now brought into general acceptance by Gassendi, while the four elements are definitively discarded (Lasswitz, Geschichte der Atomistik, 1890).

The services are well got through, and whilst Puritanism is on the one hand avoided in them, Ritualism is on the other distinctly discarded.

The joy of the real eagle-eating biographer is to do what Tennyson bluntly described as ripping up people like pigs, and violating not privacy but decency; sweeping together odious little anecdotes, recording meannesses and weaknesses and sillinesses, all the things of which the subject himself was no doubt heartily ashamed and discarded as eagerly as possible.

It was a slender roll of quite inferior dark tobacco, and the original purchaser had probably discarded it gladly.

I saw myself ignominiously discarded, and attacked by every method of calumny and reproach.

That semblance of shy affection coloured by regrets for the past and modified by the native nobility of a prince in exileso becoming in a parent to whose bosom a daughter whom he had never seen was suddenly restoredbeing of no more service for the present, was incontinently discarded.

Vicentio indignantly discards Evadnê, is challanged to fight by Colonna, and is supposed to be killed.

" When the storm of his grief at last began to abate, the King retired to his remote country-seat of Saint Leger, carrying his broken heart with himand also Madame de Mailly, as sharer of his sorrow; for it was to the woman whom he had so lightly discarded that he first turned for solace.

Most men of Jo's age were standing before their mirror of a Saturday night, whistling blithely and abstractedly while they discarded a blue polka-dot for a maroon tie, whipped off the maroon for a shot-silk, and at the last moment decided against the shot-silk in favor of a plain black-and-white, because she had once said she preferred quiet ties.

Personally, I have long since discarded the teachings of my people, and I am in a state of doubt which seriously perplexes me.

Japan at once re-robed herself with the thin veil of Western morals and conduct which she had rapturously discarded in 1914.

Reluctantly he discarded his chaps.

But as from a school of works, aping the creative, incident and romance are ruthlessly discarded, so may character and drama be omitted or subordinated to romance.

He discards the laws of others scornfully, as thinking them of no account, and ordains his own.

Another woman's weakness to be sternly discarded was that scriptural "glory" of her hair.

But on this occasion the chief movers of sedition studiously discarded all appearance of concealment.

But now, with the view of ultimately discarding the postulate of rigidity from all our materials, let us suppose some to be absolutely destitute of rigidity, and to possess merely inertia and incompressibility, and mutual impenetrability with reference to the still remaining rigid matter.

Thus from purely economic considerations the sophisticated European colonists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries involved themselves and their descendants, with the connivance of their home governments, in the toils of a system which on the one hand had served their remote forbears with good effect, but which on the other hand civilized peoples had long and almost universally discarded as an incubus.

To continue our cheerful journey with this unusual "Funeral," we soon find ourselves introduced to Lord Hardy, the unjustly discarded son of Brumpton.

31 adverbs to describe how to  discard  - Adverbs for  discard