80 adverbs to describe how to fond

Edwin Pugh says of a child of the slums who was passionately fond of reading cheap literature:"It was by means of this penny passport to Heaven that she escaped from the Hell of her surroundings.

Yet, strange as it may seem, the old lawyer was exceedingly fond of the boy, and longed to see him the master of Elmhurst.

I'm awfully fond of frogs' legs, you may remember, boys.

He is said to have chosen to die by being drowned in a butt of Malmsey, a wine of which he had been inordinately fond.

The two of you were joined by an old gentleman who forthwith began to talk wordily, tediously, continuously, with needless repetitions and in tiresome detail; you suspected that he had suffered a mental decline from age, and that he might be excessively fond, in season and out of season, of talking about himself and his opinions.

She had been remarkably fond of needle-work, and her conversation with my mother was generally the history of some pieces of work she had formerly done; the dates when they were begun, and when finished; what had retarded their progress, and what had hastened their completion.

He is so extravagantly fond of his wife that I should call him .

Professor Sheridan Delapine says: "He was specially fond of quoting Sydenham's words: 'Tota ars medici est in observationibus.'

He was genuinely fond of her.

There is a sense of this phrase, of which I am wonderfully fond.

How very odd that I should have been so devotedly fond of that girl, at an age when I could neither feel passion, nor know the meaning of the word and the effect!

It is also possessed of a carnivorous habit, it being peculiarly fond of burrowing in old burying places, where it lives, principally on the corpse.

"But I have always been, and always shall be sincerely fond of you, Freydis, and for that reason I rejoice to deduce that you are not, now, going to do anything violent and irreparable and such as your better nature would afterward regret.

He was extraordinarily fond of dogs and all domestic animals, whosympathetic creatures as they areunerringly sought him out and lavished affection upon him.

you're very well as you are;though if you were a 'youth,' I'm sure, Fanny dear, I should be desperately fond of you.

Sister Elsie is dotingly fond of the girl, which hath slept in her bosom since infancy.

He had thought that Hawkins was so foolishly fond of his son, that he could not bear to trust him out of his presence; but had never in the slightest degree suspected what he now found to be the truth.

CHAPTER X A NEW VENTURE Phineas Duge, notwithstanding an absence of anything approaching vulgarity in his somewhat complex disposition, was, for a man of affairs and an American, singularly fond of the small elegances of life.

He is rather a "bore," and is uncommonly fond of quoting the Scriptures in support of his theories.

I had a daughter once, for a few weeks, long enough to make me strangely fond of the responsibilities of a father; and then Karslake took her away, leaving me nothing to do with my life but twiddle futile thumbs and contemplate the approach of middle age."

"The Comtesse cares nothing for dukes and ambassadors, but she is most ridiculously fond of good-looking young men.

He was instinctively fond of children and of the other sex from one year old to eighty.

"It's only a china figure, Miss, which I am going to carry to an elderly lady, who lives nigh at hand, and who is mighty fond of such things.

All my fears had by this time subsided, and, being master of myself, I had leisure to study and enjoy the scene; we smoked a social pipe with them (for they are all immoderately fond of tobacco), and I then stretched myself down to sleep amidst all their chattering and smoke.

He was, as Mr. Carlyle puts it, "gluttonously fond of whatever would yield him a little solacement, were it only of a stomachic character."

80 adverbs to describe how to  fond  - Adverbs for  fond