92 adverbs to describe how to many

Some of them have lain so long that only the tops now project above the turf, and undoubtedly many of them are buried out of sight.

Doubtless many a time, before and since, faith as strong, and bravery as heroic, have been shown, and have passed unrecorded and unnoticed by men.

A like fate threatens, though more remotely, those who depreciate and censure good work; and consequently many are too prudent to attempt it.

England, just at this moment, has her hands full in South Africa, and it isn't in the least unlikely that the German Emperor would put a finger in that pie, if we gave him an excusea great many of his advisers are trying to get him to interfere without waiting for the excuse, but he's not quite willing to go that far.

damn many neighbors.

First, they'd perhaps be called 'the fallen,' instead of 'the killed' (it's a queer thing how 'fallen,' in the masculine means killed in the war, and the feminine given over to a particular kind of vice), and then the audience, or the readers, would be told that they died for democracy, or a cleaner world, when very likely many of them hated the first and never gave an hour's thought to the second.

I have seen from forty to sixty, male and female, at work in a field, many of both sexes with their bodies entirely nakedwho did not exhibit signs of shame more than cattle.

Assuredly many innocent ones will suffer then with the guilty; but what else can we do?

He has, however, written a great many besidestoo many, indeed, for variety or excellence.

But kinnikinnick is the best,dainty, sturdy, indefatigable kinnikinnick, green and glossy all the year round, lovely at Christmas and lovely among flowers at midsummer, as content and thrifty on bare, rocky hillsides as in grassy nooks, growing in long, trailing wreaths, five feet long, or in tangled mats, five feet across, as the rock or the valley may need, and living bravely many weeks without water, to make a house beautiful.

I see so many heads, butnot many like yours, no, no, not many like yours.

Will a van hold that many comfortably?

The rich men, whose wants were comparatively many, usually had on their estates white hired men or black slaves whose labor could gratify them; while the ordinary farmer, of the class that formed the great majority of the population, was capable of supplying almost all his needs himself, or with the assistance of his family.

Madre Beatissima, life was hard, and the way of right was the way of the crosshow many holy women had found it so!

When the work was done, and everything was ready for the arrival of the Finland, the captain felt that he had good reason to curse the conscienceless Chilian whose laziness or carelessness had not only caused him the loss of perhaps a quarter of a million of dollars, but had given him dayshow many he could not knowwith nothing to do; and which of these two evils might prove the worse, the captain could not readily determine.

There were some people collected in Maidstone, but not so many as on a market daythere were none on the roads.

It is not to be doubted that many diarrhoeas, as well as, other bowel affections, are produced in this way.

"If it only comes out right," she sighed distrustfully many times a day.

How eagerly many such compositions are read by members of our Church!

We shall have enoughtoo many, I fear.

Can anything be more uncharitable than damning eternally so many millions for not believing what they never heard? or prouder than calling their head a Vice-god?

To take a humble exampleIn many a remote Swiss village, rapidly grown into a fashionable resort, the local washerwomen are able to charge prices twice as high as those paid in London, probably four times as high as the normal price of the neighbourhood.

The superstitious of all persuasions, the Christians perhaps exceptedthough many of the Portuguese Christians have little more than the nameunite in showing reverence to the shrine of the saint, while Mugdooree Sahib is held quite as much in estimation by the Hindus as by the followers of he own corrupted creed, the Mohammedans of Bombay being by no means orthodox.

He passes lightly over their atrocious outrages, colors favorably many of their acts, and praises the generalship of Crawford and the soldiership of his men; when in reality the campaign was badly conducted from beginning to end, and reflected discredit on most who took part in it; Crawford did poorly, and the bulk of his men acted like unruly cowards.]; though they included a few veteran Indian fighters.

Like all his other best performances, this rugged but masterly composition draws its highest interest from himself and his own feelings, and can only be rightly appreciated by observing how fitly many of the bitter breathings of Dante apply to his own exiled and outcast condition.

92 adverbs to describe how to  many  - Adverbs for  many