Definition of Pestilently. Meaning of Pestilently. Synonyms of Pestilently

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Pestilently. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Pestilently and, of course, Pestilently synonyms and on the right images related to the word Pestilently.

Definition of Pestilently

Pestilently
Pestilently Pes"ti*lent*ly, adv. In a pestilent manner; mischievously; destructively. ``Above all measure pestilently noisome.' --Dr. H. More.

Meaning of Pestilently from wikipedia

- Look up pestilence or pestilential in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Pestilence may refer to: Infectious disease Pestilence, one of the Four Hor****...
- In Fields of Pestilent Grief is a studio album by the Norwegian funeral doom metal band Funeral. It was their first full-length studio album since their...
- (Scarabidae) have been successfully used to reduce the po****tions of pestilent flies, such as Musca vetustissima and Haematobia exigua which are serious...
- Cattley 1838), V, p. 261: "Wily Winchester…so alienated the king's mind…by pestilent persuasions creeping into [his] ears." Elton 1951, p. 175. Loades 2012...
- physician Gilles de Corbeil had already used atra mors to refer to a "pestilential fever" (febris pestilentialis) in his work On the Signs and Symptoms...
- condemned Bahá’u’lláh and his family to perpetual imprisonment in the pestilential penal colony of Acre; banished with them were most Bahá’ís in Adrianople...
- break, until they subside into the calm quiescence of the concluding 'pestilential fens, faded flowerwater, stagnant pools in the waning moon.'": 79  The...
- with wheat. The Caribbean port of Veracruz was small, with its hot, pestilential climate not a draw for permanent settlers: its po****tion never topped...
- retribution and rehabilitation, the prison soon became an overcrowded and pestilent place, subject to frequent riots by the prisoners which damaged the buildings...
- diseases were caused by transmissible agents, which he called Li Qi (戾气 or pestilential factors) when he observed various epidemics rage around him between 1641...