19 adverbs to describe how to interrogates

"'I'm nae just free to say,' replied the stranger, thus rudely interrogated, with the true Scotch evasion.

He also sought out, and strictly interrogated, several of the inhabitants of Salem, who were known to be the partisans of this persecuted friend of liberty.

Suliman ben Saoud retorted sourly that he proposed to question the Damascene in public after privately interrogating me.

And at her age, it would be too sad..." Across the drawing-room that lady looked up from her cards and sharply interrogated a manservant who had silently presented himself to her attention.

I felt that the thing one ought to aim at doing was to look experience steadily in the face, whether sweet or bitter, to interrogate it firmly, to grasp its significance.

"Peradventure," hesitatingly interrogated the youth, "peradventure you are he?"

Making an effort toward some determination which a subtle observer might have noticed weighing upon him all the evening, he added: "And, apropos of the past" "Hein?" interrogated the old lady, impatiently, still under the influence of her irascibility about the mushrooms.

thou hast it now?" impetuously interrogated the Persian.

She interrogated not only the maid in the kitchen but also Kennedy, the man of all work, outside.

He seemed to be a living question, perpetually interrogating his impressions of all that there was to be seen.

Some time after, supine again upon his bed, he heard Mr. Swain in the saloon querulously interrogating one of the stewards.

He that brings wealth home is seldom interrogated by what means it was obtained.

He now strode up with an air of alacrity and defiance, brandishing a roll of parchments, and confronted the seven principal goblins, by whom he was successively interrogated.

"Don't you people understand yet what this all means, what's happened?" he interrogated unbelievingly.

Secondly, That He never used any disguise to save His life: and, Thirdly, That He never gave an answer so ambiguous as not to embody a sufficient testimony to all that He had to say; and that, moreover, He had already satisfied those who came to interrogate Him anew, with the view not obtaining information, but merely of laying traps to ensnare Him.

After reading over the depositions, produced on the trials with the greatest care, and interrogating the culprits themselves most vigorously by means of a Croatian interpreter, these great physicians discovered that the three old women were not witches, and prevailed with the Empress to send them home in safety.

I drew out my note-book and interrogated him briefly and briskly.

By the opposition to his thought of inert and defiant custom, the thinker is compelled to interrogate his consciousness more deeply and sacredly; and being cut off from that sympathy which has its foundation in similarity of temperaments and traditions, he must fall back with simpler abandonment upon the pure idea, and must seek responses from that absolute nature of man which the men of his time are not human enough to afford him.

During the next and several successive days, a greater number of women almost than men stood at the gates, waiting either for some one of their friends or for intelligence of them, surrounding and earnestly interrogating those they met: nor could they be torn away from those they knew especially, until they had regularly inquired into every thing.

19 adverbs to describe how to  interrogates  - Adverbs for  interrogates