189 adverbs to describe how to worse

But to see Crown protection given to the Indian lands which the Americans considered their own western 'birthright' was infinitely worse.

" "ILouI feel mighty bad about having you up here in this infernal tent, when the camp is full, and": "You can't lie across the entrance to my tent and guard me, Jack.

So, sacrificing his own feelings and convictions, he made the best of an exceedingly bad business.

Its manners grew steadily worse as the travellers pushed farther and farther into the wilderness, beyond the exorcising power of Holy Cross, beyond the softening influences of Christian hospitality at Episcopal Anvik, even beyond Tischsocket, the last of the Indian villages for a hundred miles.

I was apologizing for my terribly bad play, explaining that I had no practice out in Italy, whereupon she said "I know Italy slightly.

A decayed family was only a little worse than an obscure one,a poor knight not a whit more respectable than a rich merchant.

"It's awfully bad form of a chap who's a prefect chumming up with a fellow like Mouler in the Upper Fourth," said Carton one afternoon.

" She looked decidedly worse.

That would be considerably worse than five to three.

Is not that man made morally worse, who is induced to become a tiger to his species, or who, instigated by avarice, lies in wait in the thicket to get possession of his fellow-man?

My only regret is that inasmuch as Mr. Montagu admits my past services, he might have perceived that there must be something exceptionally bad in the Government if a well-wisher like me could no longer give his affection to it.

He saw all this; and knew enough of human nature to suspect that the self-seeking which showed as moroseness in company, might show as downright bad temper in private.

I felt real bad, though, to hev the feller go off 'thout none on us speakin' to him.

One is haunted sometimes by the fancy that some day, when the air in the room is unusually bad and the trains are delayed, a curious phenomenon will be seen.

But the coffee M. St.-Ange declared he could not touch; it was too wretchedly bad.

My informant, who was a by-stander, stated that he was, no doubt, an incorrigibly bad fellow, and that the initials S.T.R. were often used in such cases.

"The literary style of most university men is commonplace, when not positively bad," wrote Herbert Spencer in his old age.

And look 'ow bad it is for hersaving money like that on the sly.

He may not be utterly bad and past all hope of redemption on that account.

The fact is as unquestionable, as it is appalling, that all our anxious endeavours to extinguish the Foreign Slave Trade, have ended in making it incomparably worse than it was before we pretended to put it down; that owing to our efforts, there are thrice the number of slaves yearly torn from Africa; and that wholly because of our efforts, two thirds of these are murdered on the high seas and in the holds of the pirate vessels.

She had assured the cardinal that Marie Antoinette had consented to grant him a secret interview; and at midnight, in the gardens of Versailles, had introduced him to a woman of notoriously bad character named Oliva, who in height resembled the queen, and who, in a conference of half a minute, gave him a letter and a rose with the words, "You know what this means."

She grew gradually worse, and at last, on the 22d of November, 1863, she died.

A man to be a criminal need not be hopelessly bad in every other sense.

I'm horribly bad.

His faults were only such as proceeded from an excessively bad education.

189 adverbs to describe how to  worse  - Adverbs for  worse