13 adverbs to describe how to discredited

Her crew, however, and even her captain, utterly discredited such part of my strange story as I told them.

[Because it is only paper.]It is vain to persuade them to oeconomize what they think a few weeks may render valueless; and such is the evil of a circulation so totally discredited, that profusion assumes the merit of precaution, extravagance the plea of necessity, and those who were not lavish by habit become so through their eagerness to part with their paper.

But our past inevitably discredits, in this respect, our future.

It is true that the Mate and the Second Engineer fox-trotted twice round the deck and into the galley, where they upset a ship's tin of gravy; and the story that the Trimmer, his complexion liberally enriched with oil and coaldust, embraced the Lieutenant and excitedly hailed the Skipper by his privy pseudonym of "Plum-face," cannot be lightly discredited; but at the same time I think each one of us felt a certain twinge of regret.

Cimabue, so runs a legend luckily not yet discredited, found the child Giotto among the sheep-folds on the solemn Tuscan hill-side, drawing with boyish art the outline of a sheep upon a stone.

Nor was this all: it was not merely discredit that they had to fear.

The Russian government thereupon publicly discredited its minister and demanded from the Persian government an immediate apology for something that had never occurred.

He is an unfinished sketch rather than a portrait, but a sketch that would not too shamefully have discredited Mr. Henry James.

is really and solely discredited in history because of the catastrophe of 1870.

It is the one rural spot on earth where a call for fresh eggs evokes remonstrative and chronic denial; where chickens for dinner are sternly discredited as mere freaks of legendary romance, and an order for a glass of new milk is incredulously answered by a tumblerful of water which tastes of whitewash-brush.

The literary taste of the eighteenth century, as typified in Dr. Johnson, consciously discredited idioms which it held to be ungrammatical; and this error persists.

Franklin's situation in London now became uncomfortable; he was deprived of his office of deputy Postmaster-General of the Colonies, which he had held since 1753, was virtually discredited, and generally snubbed.

With Delamere hopelessly discredited, Ellis hoped to have at least fair play,with fair play, he would take his chances of the outcome.

13 adverbs to describe how to  discredited  - Adverbs for  discredited