Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "notoriously"

Lexicographically close words:
notochord; notochordal; notorieties; notoriety; notorious; notour; notre; nots; nott; notte
  1. The popular treatment, which comprehends blood-letting, physicking, and the use of powerful diuretics, has proved notoriously unsuccessful.

  2. The treatment of locked-jaw, both in horses and cattle, has, hitherto, been notoriously unsuccessful.

  3. Prince Albert was notoriously fond of luncheon, and Queen Victoria humoured him.

  4. Gladstone, notoriously not unfriendly to Ritualism, was dethroned; so all looked smooth and easy for a policy of persecution.

  5. Presses,' said I, 'I am notoriously a man, and see thee quite distinctly.

  6. The administration of Debi Sing was too notoriously destructive not to cause a general clamor.

  7. I also crossed a barb with a spot, which is a white bird with a red tail and red spot on the forehead, and which notoriously breeds very true; the mongrels were dusky and mottled.

  8. On this principle of inheritance with modification we can understand how it is that sections of genera, whole genera, and even families, are confined to the same areas, as is so commonly and notoriously the case.

  9. Even in the same sub-breed, as in that of the short-faced tumbler, it is notoriously difficult to breed nearly perfect birds, many departing widely from the standard.

  10. Discriminations notoriously have to be made; and the upshot is that only rational candidates and intellectual satisfactions stand the test.

  11. He will pardon you when he has my message, for Sir Harry's temper is notoriously impatient.

  12. He was both a rich man, who could not possibly care for my trifling custom, and notoriously an honourable man.

  13. The individualism and democracy which were essential to Protestantism notoriously aided the civil and social revolution, but the centrifugal forces were too great.

  14. Notoriously both theology and metaphysics had dealt in most inadequate fashion with the material world, in the study of which the sciences were now achieving great results.

  15. The Irish are notoriously brave, yet they have a fear of public opinion unknown to an Englishman.

  16. And to buy the priest's cow in a fair is notoriously unlucky for the general dealing of the day, as well as that particular one.

  17. Their indifference rather nettled him, but he consoled himself by ascribing it to the high pressure under which newspaper offices notoriously laboured.

  18. You can't hole short putts without confidence," observed Ned Alder, who was a notoriously bad golfer.

  19. These are notoriously liable to accident.

  20. A child is notoriously a creature of the moment, looking little before and after.

  21. It was not her fault that gossip was so notoriously unreliable.

  22. This queer feeling would hardly last over the solid threshold of Home, whose atmosphere was almost notoriously uncongenial to eccentricities of that sort.

  23. The House was indeed notoriously under ministerial influence, and one of the last acts of Grenville was to attempt a reform in one particular at least.

  24. Marlborough was so notoriously avaricious, and his character was so mean, that these charges seemed to the public probable; but, in fact, his reply was tolerably complete.

  25. The returning officers for that borough had been notoriously guilty of tampering with the returns in favour of their own friends.

  26. Notoriously they had not; confessedly they had failed; and every farmer in the corn districts would avouch that often he had been brought to the brink of ruin by prices ruinously low.

  27. The timber was notoriously the finest in the county.

  28. All your other figures of disorder because they rather seeme deformities then bewties of language, for so many of them as be notoriously vndecent, and make no good harmony, I place them in the Chapter of vices hereafter following.

  29. But it appeals little to the general reader, and we must moreover notoriously not expose our deepest feelings.

  30. There is notoriously nothing more to be said on the subject.

  31. The nomadic population had been largely recruited from the criminals of other colonies, who, fleeing from justice, were notoriously in the habit of crossing the Queensland border, and evading a too searching inquiry.

  32. That revolution was notoriously the work of the Senaputtee, although he chose, for his own reasons, to place one of his brothers on the throne.

  33. The only thing that enabled her to keep up, she said, was fixing her mind resolutely on the fact that the aristocracy are notoriously impolite about answering invitations.

  34. But, and this is a matter of considerable importance, the valley of the Euphrates is notoriously unhealthy and is an extremely difficult country to negotiate.


  35. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "notoriously" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.