Avelox briskly travels to the milieu of infection, and provides intemperately clinical recendedy.
From the evangelicaloutpost.com
A Polish minister once likened it, perhaps intemperately, to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact of 1939.
From the economist.com
To clarify, he was not acting intemperately but used a chair to make the point that most crime is impulsive.
From the guardian.co.uk
Johnston sent an intemperately worded letter to Davis, who was offended enough to discuss its tone with his cabinet.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Look at Keats, loving poetry and Fanny Brawne so intemperately that he pined and died of consumption at the age of twenty-six.
From the theatlantic.com
It was helped, no doubt, by the fact that bin Laden had lashed out intemperately at moderate Arab regimes and at the United Nations.
From the time.com
Endangered species, breathing their last due to an intemperately changing climate, will be reinvigorated and feel like their old propagating selves again.
From the washingtontimes.com
The Secretary of Defense intemperately refused to discuss the question and suggested that classified material must have been leaked in order for it to be asked.
From the theatlantic.com
Lacking both talent and appeal, Hawkins gesticulates incessantly, fidgets intemperately, walks funnily and tosses her head rather like a social-climbing charwoman.
From the bloomberg.com
Anna Zubrzycki, the company's co-founder, lends Lady Macbeth a steely determination, but relies overmuch on sforzando by which odd phrases are intemperately bellowed.