He disliked Schroder because on the few occasions they had met, the man had exuberantlyignored the fact he was Aubrey Gilchrist.
Imagine some ingredient of humanity loosed from its oppressive environment in human economy: it would at once vegetate and flower into some ideal form, such as we see exuberantly displayed in nature.
But the nervous trepidation which our hero had felt in the same place on a previous occasion returned with full force when his horse was led out in an exuberantly playful and "fresh" condition.
And I went exuberantly out--so exuberantly that I left my hat upon his table, and was obliged to hasten back for it.
She felt light-hearted and triumphant at the thought of her impending new importance as the wife of a public man, and she interested herself exuberantly in the progress of the political campaign.
Some one had exuberantly fired the Whipple shack, and the pintos wanted to whirl short around in their tracks when they saw the smoking embers.
In fact, the matter had been settled; and Colonel Musgrave had received from Roger Stapylton an exuberantly granted charter of courtship.
Uncle, after greeting them not so exuberantly as usual, said with conviction: "A very moving and proper discourse.
On Sundays her happy swain soared into an empyrean of prosperity and opulence where he sat enthroned high above her, talking exuberantly of a future she dared not envisage.
The personality that could beat out exuberantly music as rhythmically various and terse and free must indeed have possessed a primitive naïveté and vitality and spontaneity of impulse.
His manner when they were alone was different; not so exuberantly cheerful--more frank and practical.
Whereupon they all became so exuberantly happy that Nathalie had rather a hard time pinning them down to their usual duties.
The boys were rendered exuberantly happy a few days later at the unexpected arrival of Mr. Banker, who had come to give them a day's outing at Littleton.
There was one form in which the new Christian chastity flourished exuberantly and unchecked: it conquered literature.
Even amid the mixed influences of the exuberantly vital times which preceded the outburst of the Renaissance, the ideally beautiful woman, as pictures still show, was the pregnant woman.
As Mrs. Loring had said, he was good-looking, but too exuberantly so.
Mr. Chesterton belongs to the exuberantly lovable tradition of Dickens; indeed, he is, in the opinion of many people, the most exuberantly lovable personality which has expressed itself in English literature since Dickens.
The dogs roved exuberantly through the brush before them.
The cowpuncher was a potential cattle-owner and good citizen, and if he went wild on occasion it was largely because he was so exuberantly young.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "exuberantly" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.